Varbuss Type post Author Eric Cassell Date March 14, 2025 CategoriesIntelligent DesignNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , animal behavior, brain, Caenorhabditis elegans, connectome, Darwinian evolution, directed evolution, dopamine, egg laying, evolution, fasting, feeding, information, intelligent design, interneurons, Journal of Neurochemistry, learning, mating, memory, motor neurons, movement, Nature (journal), nematode, Neural Networks, neurons, neuropeptide, neuroscience, neurotransmitters, sensory neurons, serotonin, synapses “Directed Evolution”: The Tiniest Brain Is Not Simple Eric Cassell March 14, 2025 Intelligent Design, Neuroscience & Mind 9 Even a cursory examination of the connectome shows the complexity of the brain, despite its tiny size. Read More ›
Fossil_bed_at_Nilpena_Ediacara_National_Park Type post Author Günter Bechly Date December 6, 2024 CategoriesEvolutionPaleontology Tagged , algae, bilaterian animals, Cambrian fossils, cnidarians, Current Biology, Cyanobacteria, Ediacaran biota, falsification, Fossil Friday (series), fossils, Kimberella, molecular clock studies, motility, nematode, New Scientist, Precambrian, Professor Dave, roundworms, UC Riverside Fossil Friday: Are Ediacaran “Fishing Hooks” a Breakthrough Discovery of Precambrian Animals? Günter Bechly December 6, 2024 Evolution, Paleontology 12 Let’s have a look at the newest edition of the Precambrian animal guessing game. Read More ›
shower Type post Date January 2, 2021 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent DesignMedicine Tagged , agriculture, asteroids, Cyanobacteria, Darwinists, ecosystems, Elizabeth Pennisi, fungi, human health, intelligent design, lichen, Mars, microbes, microbiome, mites, Nature (journal), nematode, pathogens, protists, Ryugu, skin, soil, springtails, tardigrades, Yale University Frontiers of ID: Microscopic Ecologies Science and Culture January 2, 2021 Biology, Intelligent Design, Medicine 8 Public health lecturer James Hamblin at Yale decided to go without showers — for five years! Read More ›
tardigrade Type post Date November 1, 2019 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , __edited, amber, arsenic, Caenorhabditis elegans, California, Current Biology, Darwinists, Dominican Republic, evolution, extremophiles, intelligent design, Live Science, Marcos Eberlin, Mono Lake, nematode, Oregon State University, pharmaceuticals, proteins, roundworm, tardigrades, UC San Diego Evolutionary Enigmas, Tiny Tardigrades Strut Their Superpowers Science and Culture November 1, 2019 Evolution 7 Darwinists struggle to explain why any creature would evolve protections from environmental conditions it had never experienced. Read More ›