cephalopod Type post Date May 11, 2021 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Alan Turing, bacterial flagellum, bats, Cambrian Explosion, cell walls, cephalopods, CheY, Communications Biology, Darwinists, Heidelberg University, Israel, kinetochore, Nature (journal), Science Advances, South America, University of Colorado, Unlocking the Mystery of Life, windmills Cephalopods Join the Cambrian Explosion? And Other Topics in ID Science & Culture May 11, 2021 Evolution, Intelligent Design 7 If fossils from Newfoundland have been interpreted correctly by paleontologists at Heidelberg University, they give more worries to Darwinists. Read More ›
medium tree finch Type post Author Wolf-Ekkehard Lönnig Date November 30, 2020 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , amphibians, brachiopods, Cambrian Explosion, cephalopods, corals, Darwin's Finches, endangered species, evolution, fossilization, Galápagos finches, Galápagos Finches series, Galápagos Islands, genotype, macroevolution, North America, ornithology, population size, South America, speciation, women “Darwin’s Finches”: Galápagos Islands as an Evolutionary Model Wolf-Ekkehard Lönnig November 30, 2020 Evolution 13 Taking the facts and arguments presented together, it appears to be clear that no macroevolution is happening in “Darwin’s finches.” Read More ›