Dickinsonia Type post Author Günter Bechly Date December 27, 2018 CategoriesBotanyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, anus, bacteria, bilateral symmetry, Cambrian Explosion, Cambrian News, cnidarians, ctenophores, Darwinian evolution, decomposition, Dickinsonia, dickinsoniids, Ediacaran biota, Epibaion, Facebook, fossils, fungi, glide symmetry, GUT, Ilya Bobrovskiy, Jochen Brocks, Mary Droser, Metazoa, morphology, mouth, paleontology, placozoans, protists, South Australia, sponges, Stanford University, University of California, Vendobionta #6 of Our Top Stories of 2018: Dickinsonia Probably Not an Ediacaran Animal Günter Bechly December 27, 2018 Botany, Evolution, Intelligent Design 42 So, do high levels of cholesterol biomarkers really suggest an animal affinity of Dickinsonia? Read More ›
Dickinsonia Type post Author Günter Bechly Date September 27, 2018 CategoriesBotanyEvolution Tagged , __k-review, anus, bacteria, bilateral symmetry, Cambrian Explosion, Cambrian News, cnidarians, ctenophores, Darwinian evolution, decomposition, Dickinsonia, dickinsoniids, Ediacaran biota, Epibaion, Facebook, fossils, fungi, glide symmetry, GUT, Ilya Bobrovskiy, Jochen Brocks, Mary Droser, Metazoa, morphology, mouth, paleontology, placozoans, protists, South Australia, sponges, Stanford University, University of California, Vendobionta Why Dickinsonia Was Most Probably Not an Ediacaran Animal Günter Bechly September 27, 2018 Botany, Evolution 41 So, do high levels of cholesterol biomarkers really suggest an animal affinity of Dickinsonia? Read More ›
Paradoxides_sp Type post Date September 21, 2018 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, Burgess Shale, Cambrian Explosion, Cambrian News, ctenophores, Darwinians, Douglas Axe, Eugene Koonin, fossils, Günter Bechly, intelligent design, methodological naturalism, Nature (journal), phyla, placozoans, PNAS, sponges, trilobites Still More Excuses for Cambrian Non-Evolution Science and Culture September 21, 2018 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 6 Trilobites look up silently from their Burgess Shale rock slabs, with sad eyes, asking, “Where did I come from?” Read More ›
comb-jelly-phylum-ctenophora-stockpack-adobe-stock.jpeg Type post Date October 20, 2017 CategoriesEvolutionLife Sciences Tagged , __k-review, cnidarian, comb jelly, Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey, Ctenophora, ctenophores, Darwinism, dynein, evolution, hybridization, kinesin, muscles, Neil deGrasse Tyson, nerves, neurons, phylogeny, placozoans, Vanderbilt University, zebrafish Embracing Uncertainty: Evolution’s Latest Dodge Science and Culture October 20, 2017 Evolution, Life Sciences 8 Faced with conflicting genetic evidence, Darwinians reach for a new “uncertainty principle” borrowed from physics. Read More ›