Rapid, episodic burial and the conundrums it presents for uniformitarian dating. …read more Source: creation.com
Isn’t it curious that the stars in the Pleiades constellation should be regarded so universally as seven women, and most often sisters? …read more Source: creation.com
A discussion of cosmological expansion, inflation, and Bible interpretation, plus accelerated nuclear decay …read more Source: creation.com
By Troy Lacey From Giant Millipedes to Giant Pterosaurs, Looking Back at 2022 Science Stories. …read more Source: AIG Daily
The passage of time hasn’t solved a major riddle of plant evolution. …read more Source: creation.com
Did you know that about 50% of the oxygen in the air you breathe comes from plankton in our oceans? Specifically, microplankton is made up of tiny organisms that are a mixture of zooplankton (animals) and phytoplankton (photosynthetic creatures). A fascinating discovery has been recently made regarding microplankton: Biophysicists from the University of Luxembourg have uncovered how microplan… More… …read more Source: icr.org
Erythromycin is an antibiotic that has been prescribed to many of us that may have experienced skin or upper respiratory tract infections. It was discovered in 1949 in a soil sample from the Philippines. The drug is even used in fishcare as a broad-spectrum treatment of bacterial outbreaks in fish populations. Recently, researchers from the Institute of Oceanology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (IOCAS), have been working with… More… …read more Source: icr.org
Are alternating layers of fine and coarse sand grains (laminations) in rocks evidence for deep time? Here we see many forming in real time, quickly. …read more Source: creation.com
Radiocarbon dating seems like solid science. It appeals as a kind of time machine, providing a clear peephole to peer into the past. However, a new debate over ancient human footprints from New Mexico shows one way that this supposed peephole can get all fogged up. A 2021 study had assigned an age of about 22,000 carbon years to sediments that hold mammoth, giant sloth, and human footprints found in the ancient Lake Otero Basin.More… …read more Source: icr.org
Juveniles catastrophically mired in deep mud after larger mature members of the herd abandoned them to their fate? …read more Source: creation.com
Is irreducible complexity still a problem for evolution? …read more Source: creation.com
A recent amazing discovery in China’s southern Yunnan province gives significant support to the creation model. Half-inch long invertebrate fossils of a sea creature were discovered that allegedly died more than half a billion years ago. The wormlike animal called Cardiodictyon catenulum, was originally discovered in 1984. It is classified as an armored lobopodian (a group containing the Onychophora or walking worms) that once … More… …read more Source: icr.org
With the secular evolutionary agenda gaining such momentum, it may be tempting to think ‘it’s Game over’. But look behind the showiness and bravado, and the claims are empty. …read more Source: creation.com
By Tom Hennigan When winter arrives, this fox takes off his thin summer coat and puts on a luxurious new wardrobe just for the occasion. …read more Source: AIG Daily
Evolutionary philosophy states the fossil record is a record of the gradual and slow evolution of life forms that all came from a single common ancestor impossibly long ago.1 Yet, the fossils don’t document this.2 It has long been known strange life forms appear abruptly and undergo either stasis3 (no change) or extinction. Living fossils are those living creaturesMore… …read more Source: icr.org
Popular evolutionary writers often confess that organisms look perfectly designed, even admitting that a design perspective promotes our understanding, but they nevertheless preach design denial. …read more Source: creation.com
By Ken Ham I recently saw a headline that caught my attention titled, “Crabs Aren’t The Only Thing Evolution Keeps Making. An Expert Explains.” Now what is such a statement supposed to mean? Well, the article is looking at the evolutionary question of the limits of biological evolution. Can it create “endless forms most beautiful” or are there limits? Well, my answer to this probably won’t surprise you (spoiler: evolution hasn’t created anything!)—but the answers from the experts quoted in that article might! Okay, so why crabs? Well, as the article explains, While there doesn’t seem to be a ceiling
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Do bats have a sixth sense? Turns out they can ‘see’ earth’s magnetic field with the cornea of their eyes. Small magnetite particles feature as a ‘compass needle’. …read more Source: creation.com
By Dr. Andrew A. Snelling The Everglades features one of the most diverse ecosystems on earth—with a surprising geological history. …read more Source: AIG Daily
By Ken Ham If I asked you to name five intelligent animals, you might not think to include the octopus on your list—but you should! This cephalopod is extremely smart, able to complete mazes and puzzles, and is well-known in the aquarium world as an escape artist. Interestingly, they don’t live long so this intelligence isn’t from learning—God just created their kind to be very smart. But do we share our smarts with them? Well, a recent article highlighting a new study on octopus smarts was titled, “We Share Smarts with Octopuses, and Now We Know Why.” This title suggests
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By Dr. Kaia Kloster Modern knowledge about the eye defies evolutionary explanation. …read more Source: AIG Daily
Highlighting delta formation in the Kaystros river estuary within biblical history …read more Source: creation.com
There’s a lot more variation in animal populations than what evolutionists thought. Investigation by an international research team and the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (Leibniz-IZW) stated, How fast evolution happens depends crucially on the abundance of its “fuel”: how much genetic difference there is in the ability to survive and reproduce….[The research team has]… More… …read more Source: icr.org
By Ken Ham Elephants, blue whales, ostriches—they’re the biggest of their kinds. But how do they “live so large”? Find out in the newest issue of Here are just a few of the topics you’ll explore in this newest issue of Answers: Animal domestication—does the evolutionary view or the biblical view fit the evidence? Suffering—how can we celebrate God’s goodness in dark times? Florida’s Everglades—one of the most diverse ecosystems on earth has a surprising geological history. Vital lessons we can learn from those with special needs. And more! Each of these articles—and the many others you’ll find in each
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Scientists build amazing animatronic ammonite models to investigate their swimming abilities, but this demonstrates their intelligent design rather than evolution. …read more Source: creation.com
Someone writes in to ask about the significance of the new photos taken by the James Webb Telescope. …read more Source: creation.com
By Ken Ham I’ve written multiple times on my blog about the dangers of puberty blockers and other hormone therapies or surgical “solutions” for those who believe they are transgender. Refusing to embrace God’s design of male or female (Genesis 1:27) has consequences, including horrible physical consequences for those who begin hormonal and surgical alterations to their bodies. And does The New York Times sort of agree with me, though just a little? In a very long article published recently, the column begins by telling the stories of three children (two 11-year-olds and a 13-year-old) who were prescribed puberty blockers.
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