medium tree finch Type post Author Wolf-Ekkehard Lönnig Date November 30, 2020 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , amphibians, brachiopods, Cambrian Explosion, cephalopods, corals, cormorant, Darwin's Finches, degeneration, endangered species, evolution, foraminifera, fossilization, Galápagos finches, Galápagos Finches series, Galápagos Islands, genotype, Geospizinae, John Gould, macroevolution, North America, ornithology, population growth, 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 ›
marine iguanas Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date February 19, 2020 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, Andrew McDiarmid, animals, Charles Darwin, cormorant, Discovery Institute, evolution, flightless cormorant, Galápagos Islands, history, humans, intelligent design, marine iguanas, natural theology, philosophy of biology, pilgrimage, podcast, tameness, William Paley Galápagos Pilgrim: Paul Nelson on Biological Design and History David Klinghoffer February 19, 2020 Evolution, Intelligent Design 2 Can modern intelligent design theory accommodate the fact that species evolve in historical time? Read More ›
Phalacrocorax harrisi Type post Date June 6, 2017 CategoriesEvolutionLife SciencesScience Tagged , __k-review, cilia, cormorant, Darwin's Black Box, flightlessness, Galápagos Islands, Michael Behe, UCLA Macroevolution by Loss: Flightless Birds Grounded by “Relaxed Selection” Science and Culture June 6, 2017 Evolution, Life Sciences, Science 7 Evolutionists wanting to make a big deal out of flightlessness in birds are like the merchant who lost money on every sale but tried to make it up in volume. Read More ›