Gabonionta Type post Author Günter Bechly Date June 2, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionPaleontology Tagged , Abderrazak El Albani, Adolf Seilacher, agglutinated protists, Austria, Eukaryota, Fossil Friday (series), fossil record, Francevillian Formation, Gabon, Gabonionta, Lake Michigan, Metazoa, multicellular organisms, Natural History Museum of Vienna, paleontology, rocks, taxonomy, University of Poitiers, West Africa Fossil Friday: How an Austrian Scientist Concocted a New Domain of Life called Gabonionta Günter Bechly June 2, 2023 Evolution, Paleontology 6 Is there any other evidence that this sensational discovery was nothing but hype? Sure there is. Read More ›
animal embryo Type post Date December 15, 2020 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , animals, Anomalocaris, artifact hypothesis, biofilms, Cambrian Explosion, Cambrian News, Chengjiang fossils, China, conservation, Croatia, Darwinism, Ediacaran Period, Ernst Haeckel, fossil record, Greenland, Live Science, microfossils, Molecular Biology and Evolution, mouse, multicellular organisms, Opabinia, precambrian fossils, Science (journal), Sebastian Willman, Stephen Meyer, The Scientist, Uppsala University, zebrafish First Animals? Fossils Won’t Fit Cambrian Evolution Science and Culture December 15, 2020 Evolution 7 Evolutionists are still fighting over the first animals. Each new fossil creates new questions, but there is one constant: bluffing that Darwinism is true. Read More ›
DSC_0492 Type post Author Robert F. Shedinger Date July 28, 2020 CategoriesEvolutionScience Education Tagged , August Weismann, bacterial infection, Benedikt Hallgrimsson, Brian K. Hall, Charles Darwin, Costa Rica, fairy tales, fish, limpets, multicellular organisms, natural selection, rainforest, sea floor, snakes, Strickberger’s Evolution The Fairy Tale World of an Evolution Textbook Robert Shedinger July 28, 2020 Evolution, Science Education 7 Endothermy may have advantages over ectothermy, but I wouldn’t advise taking your chances by picking up a poisonous snake. Read More ›
Jonathan Wells 2 Type post Date December 10, 2019 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, binding sites, BioEssays, DNA, ENCODE, evolution, genome, intelligent design, Jonathan Wells, junk DNA, multicellular organisms, non-coding DNA, PNAS, The Myth of Junk DNA, transcription factors, transposable elements Jonathan Wells Was Right: Non-coding DNA Continues to Show Function Science and Culture December 10, 2019 Evolution, Intelligent Design 7 Design predictions rise as evolutionary assumptions fall. The junk DNA myth is, for all practical purposes, falsified. Read More ›
Type post Author Günter Bechly Date May 26, 2016 CategoriesPaleontology Tagged , __tedited, bacteria, Cambrian News, complex life, Darwin's Doubt, eukaryotes, fossils, multicellular life, multicellular organisms, origin of life, phylogenetic analysis Could This Be the Oldest Evidence Yet for Multicellular Eukaryotes? Günter Bechly May 26, 2016 Paleontology 5 Not least when it comes to evolutionary biology, science and science reporting could do with more skepticism. Read More ›