cell Type post Author Geoffrey Simmons Date July 17, 2024 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , blood vessels, brain, cells, chromosomes, digestive enzymes, DNA, Doctor's Diary (series), Dubai, enzymes, evolution, genetic disease, genetic instructions, heart, human body, intelligent design, Library of Congress, movies, nano-machines, Nautilus, New York City, nourishment, proteins, RNA, stem-cell, submarine, supplies Doctor’s Diary: A Truly Fantastic Voyage! Geoffrey Simmons July 17, 2024 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 9 The old movie mostly dealt with the brain, lung, heart, blood vessels (all at the tissue level) and a few scattered cells. Read More ›
Drosera Type post Author Jonathan McLatchie Date February 21, 2024 CategoriesAnatomyBotanyEvolutionIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , Aldovanda, carnivorous plants, carnivory, Charles Darwin, chitinase, Cologne, convergence, Darwin's Black Box, digestion, digestive enzymes, Dionaea, enzymes, evolution, Genlisea, Germany, Heinz-Albert Becker, insects, intelligent design, Irreducible Complexity, Michael Behe, morphology, Nepenthes, nutrients, On the Origin of Species, prey, tentacles, Utricularia, Wolf-Ekkehard Lönnig Carnivory in Plants: A Problem for Evolution Jonathan McLatchie February 21, 2024 Anatomy, Botany, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 10 The paper highlights features of carnivorous plants that exhibit irreducible complexity, a characteristic of designed systems, citing the work of Michael Behe. Read More ›
Tiktaalik Type post Date January 3, 2022 CategoriesAnatomyEvolutionPaleontology Tagged , Chile, Darwinism, digestive enzymes, digits, evolution, fin rays, fish, gene regulatory network, genes, genetic code, intelligent design, limbs, Long Story Short, mitosis, Neil Shubin, PNAS, Spain, tiktaalik, University of Chicago More Fishy Tales Afoot from Neil Shubin Science and Culture January 3, 2022 Anatomy, Evolution, Paleontology 10 Tiktaalik discoverer Neil Shubin from the University of Chicago searches for genetic clues between fish fins and tetrapod toes. Read More ›