Salp Type post Author David Coppedge Date February 22, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignZoology Tagged , American Geophysical Union, atmosphere, California, carbon, carbon emissions, climate change, diatoms, foresight, global warming, habitability, jellyfish, NASA, Nature Communications, New Zealand, notochord, Penn State, phylogeny, plankton, polychaetes, providence, reporters, Science (journal), sea salps, sea squirts, silicate weathering, Southern California, Southern Ocean, thermostat, tunicates Meet the Ghostly Organisms that Rescue the Planet David Coppedge February 22, 2023 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Zoology 9 A man was paddleboarding last month when he came across a mysterious creature three miles off the shoreline of California. Read More ›
chloroplasts Type post Author Emily Reeves Date October 1, 2021 CategoriesBotanyIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , Albert Einstein, ATP, carbon, carbon emissions, chlorophyll, chloroplasts, ecosystem, electricity, energy sources, green energy, intelligent design, light, matter, molecular machines, photosynthesis, photovoltaics, solar panels, voltage Nature’s Energy Mining Relies on Molecular Design Emily Reeves October 1, 2021 Botany, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 5 Plants mine energy from a primary source (sun) and transform that energy into a secondary source (sugar). Read More ›
António Guterres Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date May 3, 2020 CategoriesBioethics Tagged , António Guterres, carbon emissions, coal, coronavirus, COVID-19, fossil fuels, fracking, global warming, globalism, natural gas, natural resources, New York Times, obesity, regulatory control, United Nations Time to Make Fossil Fuel Industries “Pay”? Wesley J. Smith May 3, 2020 Bioethics 3 Authoritarian central planning never works and it wouldn’t “save the planet.” It would just make us all less prosperous and free. Read More ›