cactus Type post Date June 25, 2021 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , aquaporins, Atacama Desert, Austin, cactus, Caltech, cells, Chile, cicadas, fish, Michael Denton, Nature Communications, Nature Nanotechnology, The Wonder of Water, Third World, University of Illinois, University of Texas, water Handling Water Like Nature Does — By Intelligent Design Science and Culture June 25, 2021 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 7 Here in the Pacific Northwest we are heading into a possibly historic heatwave. Water is on everyone's mind. Nature beautifully anticipated our needs. Read More ›
Atacama-Desert Type post Date September 18, 2019 CategoriesLife Sciences Tagged , __edited, astrobiology, Atacama Desert, Australia, BBC News, cable bacteria, carbon, Chile, DNA, Great Barrier Reef, intelligent design, Live Science, Mars, microbes, molecular machines, Nature Communications, Nature Scientific Reports, New Scientist, oxygen, Paul Nelson, perchlorates, PNAS With an Assist from Nature, DNA Travels the Globe Science and Culture September 18, 2019 Life Sciences 9 Life makes its way around the world using nonliving transportation systems, seeding the world with complex specified information. Read More ›
Type post Author Sarah Chaffee Date March 28, 2019 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , __k-review, Atacama Desert, beauty, hydrological cycle, intelligent design, life, light, Michael Denton, oxygen, Pacific Northwest, photosynthesis, rain, spring, summer, sun, The Wonder of Water, water, water cycle, weather Springtime Is High Season for Intelligent Design Sarah Chaffee March 28, 2019 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 3 What complexity there is in our water cycle, which brings life to many organisms and at the same time replenishes and renews itself. Read More ›
Chengjiang fossil site Type post Date January 18, 2019 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, A Meaningful World, Atacama Desert, beauty, Benjamin Wiker, Burgess Shale, Cambrian News, Chengjiang fossils, Chile, China, Crustacea, Darwin's Doubt, DNA, euarthropod, evolution, Ferris Jabr, insects, intelligent design, Jonathan Witt, MIT, Ohio State University, Periodic Table, sexual selection, Stephen Meyer, The Conversation, water, wildflowers Early Cambrian Complexity and Other News Science and Culture January 18, 2019 Evolution, Intelligent Design 8 Stephen Meyer’s case for intelligent design in Darwin’s Doubt keeps getting vindicated by new fossils. Read More ›