iron Type post Date January 25, 2022 CategoriesBiologyGeophysicsOrigin of LifeRare Earth Tagged , bacteria, biophysics, Cambrian Explosion, eukaryotes, evolution, geochemistry, geophysics, Great Oxidation Event, heme, hemoglobin, Howard Glicksman, intelligent design, iron, Mars, nutrients, oceans, Oxford University, oxygen, PNAS, supernova, toxicity, Washington University No Iron, No Life: Intelligent Design in Iron Availability Science and Culture January 25, 2022 Biology, Geophysics, Origin of Life, Rare Earth 9 As an exercise, count the number of lucky breaks that had to occur for the evolutionary story to work. Read More ›
volcano Type post Author Casey Luskin Date February 23, 2021 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , carbon, erosion, Great Oxidation Event, limestone, mantle, Michael Denton, Nature Communications, Nature Geoscience, nitrogen, phosphorous, plate tectonics, scientific papers, solar system, subduction, sulfur, The Wonder of Water, volcanos What Subduction Teaches About Intelligent Design Casey Luskin February 23, 2021 Intelligent Design 9 My PhD research was on the early plate tectonic history on earth. Plate tectonics involves the movement of plates on the surface of the earth. Read More ›
burrowing Type post Date March 28, 2018 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, archaellum, bacterial flagellum, Cambrian Explosion, Cambrian News, cancer theory, Cloudina, Current Biology, Darwinian evolution, Ediacaran, eukaryotes, gene regulatory networks, Graham Budd, Great Oxidation Event, Greenland, oceans, oxygen theory, paleontology, Quanta, slime theory Cambrian Explosion Shrapnel Still Hitting Evolutionary Scenarios Science and Culture March 28, 2018 Evolution, Intelligent Design 9 Darwinian paleontologists try model after contradictory model to get blind chance to invent design. Read More ›