Chicxulub Type post Author David Coppedge Date October 12, 2023 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , angiosperms, birds, butterflies, Chicxulub impact, Cretaceous Period, dinosaurs, evolution, Field Museum, flowering plants, frogs, ichthyosaurs, intelligent design, Israel, Jordan, Jurassic Park, Lebanon, mammals, Mars rover, orchids, Paleogene, Palestine, Patagonia, Penn State, pterosaurs, roses, Science Advances, storytelling, Syria, Turkey, UC Santa Barbara, University of Bath, worms Chinks in the Chicxulub Story David Coppedge October 12, 2023 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 11 If an asteroid impact wiped out the dinosaurs as believed by the scientific consensus, its effects on evolution seem strained and inconsistent. Read More ›
Glyptodon Type post Author Günter Bechly Date December 16, 2022 CategoriesPaleontologyScience Tagged , Afrotheria, America, Antarctica, anteaters, Argentina, armadillos, clades, Darwinists, Early Eocene, megafauna, molecular clock, Natural History Museum of Vienna, New World, Patagonia, phylogenetic systematics, placental mammals, Pleistocene, primates, sloths, Tubulidentata, Xenarthra Fossil Friday: The Giant Armadillo Glyptodon and the Abrupt Origin of Xenarthrans Günter Bechly December 16, 2022 Paleontology, Science 20 Should we dare to consider the possibility that something is wrong with the Darwinist assumptions? Heaven forbid! Read More ›