Lenski’s terrific LTEE Type post Author Andrew McDiarmid Date December 13, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Ann Gauger, Bijan Nemati, culture, Darwinian evolution, DNA, E. coli, engineers, Eric Anderson, evolution, extinction, Idaho, Iraq, Long Term Evolutionary Experiment, mutations, Richard Lenski, Scott Minnich, Why It Matters Hitting the Brakes on “Rapid Evolution” Andrew McDiarmid December 13, 2023 Evolution, Intelligent Design 2 Evolutionary biologist Richard Lenski hopes to demonstrate Darwinian evolution in action. But one humble scientist from Northern Idaho says not so fast! Read More ›
Qafzeh Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date November 2, 2023 CategoriesBioethicsHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , ancient Greeks, animals, anthropology, birds, death, Dogs, Eurasia, funerals, Homo naledi, humans, Iraq, Israel, Live Science, Neanderthals, Oxford University Press, paleontologists, Shanidar Cave, skeletons, South Africa, University of Arizona, Zagros Mountains When Did Humans Start Burying the Dead? Denyse O’Leary November 2, 2023 Bioethics, Human Origins and Anthropology 6 Only humans understand death as the inevitable and final reality for all mortal beings no matter what we do. Read More ›
Homo_sapiens_neanderthalensis-Mr._N Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date December 12, 2022 CategoriesArtsHuman Origins and AnthropologyScience Tagged , children, civilization, copper, Greece, Homo naledi, Iraq, Lee Berger, Michael Marshall, Neanderthals, owls, pulses, Quartz, Rising Star Cave, Shanidar Cave, South Africa, University of Liverpool, Zagros Mountains Early Humans Were More Sophisticated than We Thought Denyse O’Leary December 12, 2022 Arts, Human Origins and Anthropology, Science 6 Neanderthals were not just downing raw hunks of meat 70,000 years ago, as many of us have assumed. Read More ›