grass Type post Author David Coppedge Date August 10, 2022 CategoriesLife SciencesScience Tagged , angiosperms, biosphere, carbon, copper, dairy products, earthworms, eggs, erosion, flowering plants, grass, grasses, grasslands, intelligent design, iron, magnesium, maize, meat, metalloenzymes, Michael Denton, moles, monocots, prior fitness, Privileged Species, Science (journal), zinc Biology Helps Us Understand the Blessing of Grasses David Coppedge August 10, 2022 Life Sciences, Science 7 Don’t walk on the grass, that “often undervalued” form of life, without looking down. It’s amazing down there. Read More ›
AFEWFLOWERS.1a Type post Author Wolf-Ekkehard Lönnig Date January 10, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , abominable mystery, angiosperms, birds, Charles Darwin, evolution, flowering plants, fossil record, Granville Sewell, Günter Bechly, living fossils, mammals, Max Planck Institute, monocots, paleobotany, University of Tübingen, Wolf-Ekkehard Lönnig Abstract: Lönnig on Darwin’s “Abominable Mystery” Wolf-Ekkehard Lönnig January 10, 2022 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 3 All orders and families of the angiosperms appear abruptly in the fossil record (the same for most lower systematic categories). Read More ›