Portuguese man-o’war Type post Author David Coppedge Date December 21, 2022 CategoriesAnatomyEcologyIntelligent DesignLife SciencesScience Tagged , Caltech, carbon monoxide, Cnidaria, Douglas Axe, foresight, functional whole, jellyfish, krill, Living Waters, marching band, Monterey Bay, physiology, PNAS, Scyphozoa, Smithsonian Magazine, swimming, taxonomy Synchronized Swimming in Siphonophores: A Design Worth Imitating David Coppedge December 21, 2022 Anatomy, Ecology, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences, Science 10 It must be good if engineers want to copy it. Siphonophores are colonial animals that have mastered the sport of synchronized swimming. Read More ›
meteorite 2 Type post Author Michael Egnor Date June 30, 2019 CategoriesGeologyOrigin of LifePhysical Sciences Tagged , __edited, archaea, astrobiology, Australia, bacteria, carbon monoxide, creation myth, cyanide, DNA, enzymes, genetic code, Hollywood, information, intelligence, iron, materialism, meteorites Astrobiology: Searching for the Origin of Life, In All the Wrong Places Michael Egnor June 30, 2019 Geology, Origin of Life, Physical Sciences 3 Astrobiologists think they may have found where life came from — cyanide in meteorites! Read More ›