Biston_betularia Type post Author Casey Luskin Date November 17, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionZoology Tagged , antibiotic resistance, birds, Biston betularia, body plans, branches, Charles Darwin, coloration, Cornelius Hunter, creationism, Darwinian evolution, evolution, Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, fundamentalist Christians, Great Britain, Icons of Evolution, IFL Science, Jonathan Wells, Katie Spalding, Michael Majerus, moth wings, moths, natural selection, New York Times, organs, peppered moths, Science and Culture Today, textbooks, trunks, twigs, Zombie Science Pop Science Site Enlists the Peppered Moth to Attack Religion Casey Luskin November 17, 2025 Evolution, Zoology 12 If this is an “excellent” example of “Darwinian evolution in action,” it shows that Darwinian evolution doesn’t do very much. Read More ›
pine trees in snow Type post Author Emily Reeves Date January 25, 2024 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , biomass, branches, equations, hierarchy, intelligent design, methodology, multifunctionality, Paper Digest, reverse-engineering, roots, Stuart Burgess, trees, trunks, weight, wind Paper Digest: Are Trees Well Designed? Emily Reeves January 25, 2024 Biology, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 7 Consistent with Stuart Burgess’s general strategy, this paper is an excellent example of how ID research can be applied in a scientific discipline. Read More ›
geraniums Type post Author Walter Myers III Date January 21, 2021 CategoriesBotanyLife Sciences Tagged , Apple iPhone, branches, cellulose, computer programs, computers, Energy, Facebook, Fibonacci sequence, flowers, humans, Instagram, leaves, module, needles, nitrogen, oxygen, photosynthesis, pine tree, programmers, skin cells, soil, Southern California, sunlight, thermostats, TikTok, trunks, water Plant Diversity and Computer Programming Walter Myers III January 21, 2021 Botany, Life Sciences 8 I asked the gardener how come, after all these years, the soil in my geranium pots is at roughly the same level. Read More ›