polar bear Type post Author Stephen J. Iacoboni Date May 16, 2023 CategoriesBiochemistryBiologyEnvironment & ClimateEvolutionGeneticsIntelligent Design Tagged , adaptability, Alaska, Arizona, biologists, biosphere, birds, cars, cetaceans, Charles Darwin, designer, echolocation, elephants, evolution, fossil record, iguanas, intelligent design, Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, kerosene, mammals, middle ear, natural selection, naturalists, penguins, physiology, polar bears, whales Natural Selection Subtracts, It Doesn’t Add — And That Matters Stephen J. Iacoboni May 16, 2023 Biochemistry, Biology, Environment & Climate, Evolution, Genetics, Intelligent Design 4 In the wild, all organisms must live within their niche. There are no wild polar bears in Arizona, and no iguanas in Alaska. Read More ›
dog surfing Type post Author Günter Bechly Date June 27, 2018 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, Alfred Russel Wallace, Atlantic Ocean, biogeography, Casey Luskin, common ancestry, Donald Prothero, George Gaylord Simpson, Gondwana, iguanas, Madagascar, molecular clock, New World monkeys, New Zealand, platypus, Platyrrhini, rafting, South America Rafting Stormy Waters: When Biogeography Contradicts Common Ancestry Günter Bechly June 27, 2018 Evolution, Intelligent Design 18 The orderly pattern of biogeographic distribution of plants and animals was one of the lines of evidence that Charles Darwin mentioned in support of his theory. Read More ›