Hallucigenia Type post Author David Coppedge Date August 9, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionPaleontology Tagged , Anomalocaris, BBC News, Burgess Shale, Cambrian Explosion, Cambrian News, centipedes, China, common ancestry, Current Biology, cuticle, Darwin's Doubt, euarthropods, Hallucigenia, Javier Ortega-Hernández, Jean-Bernard Caron, Live Science, Middle Cambrian, Morocco, Nature (journal), nervous system, New Scientist, Precambrian strata, Science (journal), software, spiders, Stephen Meyer, University of Cambridge, velvet worms In Resolving Darwin’s Doubt, These Cambrian Fossils Are No Help David Coppedge August 9, 2023 Evolution, Paleontology 8 This is hierarchical organization, none of which is seen in the Precambrian layers beneath. Read More ›
sliders Type post Date January 2, 2020 CategoriesAnatomyIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, Arizona State University, Biomimetics, centipedes, cilia, electricity, electron transport, genes, genomes, intelligent design, Irreducible Complexity, junk DNA, materials science, metabolism, Michael Behe, miRNA, orb webs, photosynthesis, physiology, spiders, swimming, Tohoku University, University of North Carolina, University of Otago Care for Appetizers? Electric Proteins, Spidey Sense, and More Science and Culture January 2, 2020 Anatomy, Intelligent Design 8 Welcome to the second day of the New Year! Like tasty sliders, these short news stories should get the juices flowing for big developments in 2020. Read More ›