plastic in the ocean Type post Date September 17, 2020 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , amino acids, Ann Gauger, antibodies, bioRxiv, biosphere, coral reefs, Darwinian evolution, environmental science, evolution, fish, homeostasis, hydrocarbons, intelligent design, Michael Behe, microbes, mutations, oceans, physiologists, plastic, PNAS, pollution, polyethylene, Saudi Arabia, sea turtles, The Edge of Evolution, waste products, Wired Magazine Plastic-Eating Microbes — “Rapid Evolution” May Not Be Darwinian at All Science and Culture September 17, 2020 Evolution, Intelligent Design 9 Environmental scientists warn frequently that the world is drowning in plastic. Here is some unexpected good news. Read More ›
James-Tour Type post Author Sarah Chaffee Date February 17, 2018 CategoriesEnvironment & ClimateEvolutionIntelligent DesignLife SciencesOrigin of Life Tagged , __k-review, bees, bias, conservation, debate, environmental science, evolution, intelligent design, James Tour, pesticides, Phys.org, prebiotic chemistry, Research, Rice University, science, toxicity Toward Self-Scrutiny in Science Sarah Chaffee February 17, 2018 Environment & Climate, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences, Origin of Life 3 Think about how this kind of reasoning relates to the intelligent design and evolution debate. Read More ›