Springtail_Pogonognathellus_longicornis_(24907256347).jpg Type post Author David Coppedge Date March 3, 2025 CategoriesApplied SciencesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , abortion, Animal Algorithms, bacterial flagella, Biomimetics, cable bacteria, centrioles, Current Biology, Darwinism, Discovery Institute Press, engineers, Eric Cassell, evolution, fetuses, Harvard University, intelligent design, Living Waters, mantis shrimp, materials science, Michael Behe, molecular machines, navigation, New Scientist, nose, PNAS, sea turtles, sophistication, springtails, super-resolution microscopy, University of North Carolina, University of Oldenburg As Science Observes, Talk of Evolution Fades David Coppedge March 3, 2025 Applied Sciences, Evolution, Intelligent Design 8 Another point worthy of note: the more sophistication that is found in biological engineering, the more scientists want to imitate it. Read More ›
Walt Whitman Type post Author David Coppedge Date March 15, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , bioelectric field, bioelectricity, blood clotting, cable bacteria, drug delivery, electricity, locomotion, Monash University, PNAS, proteins, skin cells, Steve Laufmann, swimming pool, The Scientist, titin, University of Warwick, Walt Whitman, water wires, Your Designed Body Let’s Sing the Body Electric David Coppedge March 15, 2023 Evolution, Intelligent Design 7 The emerging science of “bioelectricity” is opening new vistas into the electrical energy powering our nerves, organs, and tissues. Read More ›
mud Type post Date September 1, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , amino acids, Antony van Leeuwenhoek, bacteria, biofilms, cable bacteria, carbon dioxide, electrical current, electricity, Elizabeth Pennisi, hydrogen, microbes, proteins, sediments, semiconductors, toxic wastes, University of Maryland, University of New South Wales, University of North Carolina Design Gets Down and Dirty — Complex Specified Information in Electric Mud Science and Culture September 1, 2020 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 9 Bacteria that conduct electricity with cables may be involved in everything from cleansing the oceans and enriching the soil to guarding our own teeth. 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 ›