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In 2017, a large dinosaur was discovered washed out to sea,1 similar to the dinosaur bone found 70 miles off Norway’s coast.2 Only this one was partially intact, nearly perfectly preserved, and still contained its last meal fossilized inside its gut.1 Recently, a group led by paleontologists from the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology examined the stomach contents of the dinosaur and reported their findin… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
By Ken Ham If you were hunting for dinosaur footprints, it probably wouldn’t occur to you to look up—but that’s exactly where a team of researchers discovered a trackway of the footprints of a titanosaur (long-necked sauropod). In Southern France, researchers were crawling through a labyrinth of cave passages and discovered the prints, 1,640 feet underground. The researchers discovered 38 tracks, some of which were four feet long (now that’s one big dinosaur!), likely made by three of the giant creatures. The researchers discovered 38 tracks, some of which were four feet long (now that’s one big dinosaur!), likely made [More]
The very first tapejarid pterosaur identified in the United Kingdom was recently found on the Isle of Wight along the southern coast of England.1 But the discovery also raises some questions that are uncomfortable for uniformitarian scientists. Tapejarids are extinct flying reptiles that have “elaborate soft tissue head crests” and a few other anatomical differences from other pterosaurs.1 More… …read more Source: icr.org     
Can they form in moving water, consistent with Noah’s Flood? …read more Source: creation.com     
The Scottish island of Kerrera has produced the earliest known bug in the fossil record, a millipede.1 It was found in Silurian System rocks recently claimed by secular scientists to be 425 million years old.1 Unexplainably, their millipede fossil just seemed to show up, fully-formed as a completely functioning “creeping thing.” This discovery also caused some consternation with the uniformitarian … More… …read more Source: icr.org     
A massive canyon rivalling Grand Canyon has been discovered beneath the ice on Greenland, and uniformitarian scientists are explaining it as a consequence of flooding.1 We couldn’t agree more. Greenland canyon is as deep as Grand Canyon and is about 450 miles long.2 It is too old to be a result of the Ice Age, so the mystery of how it could have formed has baffled uniformitarian geologists. … More… …read more Source: icr.org     
A new study published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters has determined that P?h?honu volcano is the world’s largest by volume and the hottest.1 Found almost 700 miles northwest of Hawai’i, P?h?honu volcano is almost completely submerged beneath the Pacific Ocean.2 Only two small, rocky remnants stick up to about 170 feet above the surface, exposing only six acres in area.1 More… …read more Source: icr.org     
By Ken Ham We have an incredible fossil here at the Creation Museum that guests can see in one of our excellent exhibits. It’s a fossil of a fish halfway through swallowing another fish, which was supposed to be its dinner! This fossil clearly points to catastrophic burial—the fish didn’t even have time to finish swallowing its prey before it was rapidly buried. Well, a fossil discovered off the coast of England tells a similar story. A squid-like creature, called a belemnoid, with “ten arms covered with hooks,” was fossilized with a fish that had been viciously killed, presumably for [More]
How could T. rex be buried with sharks in the same rock formation? Read More
A new study published in the journal Gondwana Research has identified a rather out-of-place bone from a theropod dinosaur called an elaphrosaur that apparently didn’t eat meat.1 In fact, it was toothless. Adding to the mystery, it was found in rocks thought by secular scientists to be 40 million years too young.2 Furthermore, the dinosaur was found in a location that is claimed to have been close to t… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
The beginning of modern-style plate tectonics is another unsolved mystery in uniformitarian geology. No secular geologist seems to have a good answer. Some have even speculated that massive meteorites or large mantle plumes could have started the plates moving, but there is little physical evidence to support either.1 Recently, another attempt was made to solve this mystery. A new study published in Science AdvancesMore… …read more Source: icr.org     
How quickly did they form? …read more Source: creation.com     
By Dr. Andrew A. Snelling Forty years later, Mount St. Helens still teaches us lessons about the powerful forces the Creator uses to shape the earth. …read more Source: AIG Daily     
A newly published analysis of four fossil molar teeth from a monkey dug up along the left bank of the Yuruá River in the Peruvian Amazon is causing a great deal of evolutionary confusion.1 The problem is that this particular type of monkey has only been found previously in rocks of the same strata in North Africa. While this new finding causes grief for evolution, it vindicates geological data from Genesis Flood research conduct… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
A new study published in Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association has found what is claimed to be the oldest recorded attack by a squid-like creature.1 Uniformitarian scientists are struggling to explain to origin of this unique fossil, because both the squid-like animal and the prey were preserved in a life-like entanglement. The 24-inch fossil includes a squid-like animal called a belemnoid wi… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
The accurate prediction of an earthquake could potentially save thousands of lives. Everything from the study of strange animal behavior to satellites mapping changes in surface elevation have been employed to try and predict earthquakes. However, few of these methods have been shown to be reliable or accurate. Recently, a new study published in the Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America has suggested that earthq… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
A new study published in Nature has found that tectonic plates may change directions rapidly, or “wobble,” several months before a massive quake is released.1 Scientists are not sure why, but it may lead to a future breakthrough in earthquake predictions. Jonathan R. Bedford—from the Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences in Potsdam, Germany—and colleagues fr… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
A tiny snake “frozen in time” in amber belies its claimed 99 million year age. Read More
Where are the yedomas from previous ice ages? …read more Source: creation.com     
Why is Homo heidelbergensis so much younger than previously thought? …read more Source: creation.com     
Recently, geologist Harry S. Pettingill has found that deepwater oil and gas fields may be more environmentally friendly than first thought.1 In this day and age of trying to find an energy source that makes the smallest environmental impact, we may have overlooked a solution right below our feet…or actually, deep beneath the ocean. Heather Saucier summarized Pettingill’s findings in the April issue of The AAPG Exp… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
How did the development of deep time in 18th century France affect Britain? …read more Source: creation.com     
Recently, a new study published in Nature Communications found that mountain streams may be much larger contributors to the global carbon cycle than previously believed.1 The study suggests that this is a consequence of the higher turbulence levels of most mountain streams. Lead author Åsa Horgby, of the Stream Biofilm and Ecosystem Research Laboratory at École Polytechnique Fédérale d… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
Recently, Joshua Rosenfeld made a new attempt to explain an ongoing conundrum in secular geology.1 Although a mystery to those holding to a uniformitarian worldview, it is easily solved by accepting the reality of the global Flood. Rosenfeld, a retired oil geologist, publishing in the April issue of The AAPG Explorer, noted that the controversy over the origin of the Whopper Sand has endured for over 15 years, w… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
A fossil spider fooled experts and was published in a scientific journal. Since fossils are often used as weapons in the war of worldviews, what cautionary lessons can be learned? …read more Source: creation.com     
Recently, a new study published in Nature Communications has suggested that pulses of massive amounts of lava can release as much CO2 as humanity will produce for the entire 21st century. This indicates that volcanic activity, especially during the global Flood and right after, likely produced tremendous amounts of CO2 that has far outweighed any produced by humans. This really should be no surprise, … More… …read more Source: icr.org     
Paleontologists in Australia have recently discovered a treasure trove of amber with trapped insects, spiders, and fungi.1 These new fossils are revealing some animal behavioral secrets and are creating some baffling mysteries. Amber is ancient tree resin. And many times what is trapped in the amber can provide us with a glimpse of life in the past—like a time capsule. This new discovery, published in Scientifi… More… …read more Source: icr.org