Daphnia Type post Author Jonathan McLatchie Date November 12, 2024 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , alleles, Arizona State University, crustaceans, Daphnia pulex, Denyse O'Leary, editors, evolution, genome, hype, nucleotide diversity, selection Is Daphnia Evolving at “Lightning Speed”? Jonathan McLatchie November 12, 2024 Evolution, Intelligent Design 3 If this is a prime example of the transformative power of evolution, the evidence is not at all impressive. Read More ›
prairie-dogs-get-a-treat Type post Date December 25, 2018 CategoriesEvolutionHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , __k-review, animals, bottleneck, generations, Human Evolution (journal), human origins, humans, inference, intelligent design, most recent common ancestor, mutation rate, neutral evolution, nucleotide diversity, population, Rockefeller University, species, University of Basel Merry Christmas! #8 of Our Top Stories of 2018: Humans and Animals Are (Mostly) the Same Age? Science and Culture December 25, 2018 Evolution, Human Origins and Anthropology 4 I am intrigued, but to be honest, I don’t quite know what to make of it just yet, and don’t want to jump to any conclusions. Read More ›
prairie-dogs-get-a-treat Type post Date June 8, 2018 CategoriesEvolutionHuman Origins and AnthropologyIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, animals, bottleneck, earth, generations, Human Evolution (journal), human origins, humans, inference, intelligent design, most recent common ancestor, mutation rate, neutral evolution, nucleotide diversity, population, Rockefeller University, species, University of Basel New Paper in Evolution Journal: Humans and Animals Are (Mostly) the Same Age? Science and Culture June 8, 2018 Evolution, Human Origins and Anthropology, Intelligent Design 3 I am intrigued, but to be honest, I don’t quite know what to make of it just yet, and don’t want to jump to any conclusions. Read More ›