Sauropods Type post Author Andrew McDiarmid Date January 19, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignPaleontology Tagged , ancestral species, Avalon explosion, bacteria, body plans, Cambrian Explosion, common ancestry, genes, Günter Bechly, ID the Future, mammals, paleontologists, placental mammals, podcast, protein folds, Sarah Chaffee, Stephen Meyer, Triassic explosion Günter Bechly on Life’s Sudden Information Explosions Andrew McDiarmid January 19, 2025 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Paleontology 3 “There’s no reasonable way,” Bechly concludes, “to get from bacteria to mammals via evolutionary processes.” Read More ›
Museo_di_storia_naturale_Florence_-_Canis_etruscus_2_white_background Type post Author Günter Bechly Date March 8, 2024 CategoriesEvolutionPaleontology Tagged , ancestors, ancestral species, cladistics, common descent, Darwinism, Fossil Friday (series), fossil record, microevolution, phylogenetic systematics, Pleistocene, Pliocene, stem group, Willi Hennig, wolves Fossil Friday: Direct Fossil Ancestors of Living Species? Günter Bechly March 8, 2024 Evolution, Paleontology 6 Willi Hennig, the founder of phylogenetic systematics (cladistics), recognized that finding and demonstrating direct ancestors would be a very hard task. Read More ›
magnificent-sea-anemone-stockpack-adobe-stock-322513937-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Cornelius Hunter Date January 27, 2017 CategoriesBiologyEvolution Tagged , __k-review, ancestral species, anomalies, complex life, evidence for evolution, foresight, J.B.S. Haldane, marine biology, Normal Science, Precambrian, rabbits, Research Sea Anemone Is a Proverbial “Precambrian Rabbit” Cornelius Hunter January 27, 2017 Biology, Evolution 4 When asked what evidence would disprove evolution, 20th-century evolutionist J.B.S. Haldane had a famous answer. Read More ›