Keichousaurus_hui_fossil Type post Author Günter Bechly Date October 13, 2023 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPaleontology Tagged , allometric growth, crocodilians, Darwinian mechanisms, Early Triassic, fish, flippers, fossil record, giraffes, humans, ichthyosaurs, intelligent design, lizards, macromutations, mammals, marine reptiles, Mesozoic, mutations, neck, nothosaurs, paleontology, Permian, plesiosaurs, population genetics, sea snake, sea turtle, sloths, stem group, vertebrae, vertebrates Fossil Friday: Rapid Elongation of Plesiosaur Necks Points to Intelligent Design Günter Bechly October 13, 2023 Intelligent Design, Paleontology 7 The breaking of the conserved number of cervical vertebrae is hard to reconcile with an unguided evolutionary mechanism. Read More ›
taneli-lahtinen-754080-unsplash Type post Date June 6, 2019 CategoriesEvolutionReproductive Science Tagged , __k-review, bats, bird song, birds, chromosomes, clades, climate change, collagen, crocodilians, Current Biology, Darwinism, evolution, Flight, genome, Immune System, intelligence, light, mammals, Michael Gross, migration, phylogeny, PNAS, positive selection, syrinx, transcriptome Birds and Bats: How Bright Is Evolutionary Light? Science and Culture June 6, 2019 Evolution, Reproductive Science 8 The media are generous with claims that new findings “shed light” on evolution. Read More ›