bread Type post Author Eric Hedin Date September 18, 2023 CategoriesBiologyFine-tuningIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , Americas, Asia, bread, cooking, corn, domestication, Europe, evolution, Fire-Maker, food production, fruit, Harvard University, human brain, maize, Michael Denton, nuts, pancakes, planetary fine-tuning, pulses, rice, Richard Wrangham, roots, salt, seed dispersal, wheat For Our Daily Bread, Thank Planetary Fine-Tuning Eric Hedin September 18, 2023 Biology, Fine-tuning, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 7 The existence of progenitor food crops (edible plants) on Earth was a necessary starting point for the availability of our food. Read More ›
Homo_sapiens_neanderthalensis-Mr._N Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date December 12, 2022 CategoriesArtsHuman Origins and AnthropologyScience Tagged , children, civilization, copper, Greece, Homo naledi, Iraq, Lee Berger, Michael Marshall, Neanderthals, owls, pulses, Quartz, Rising Star Cave, Shanidar Cave, South Africa, University of Liverpool, Zagros Mountains Early Humans Were More Sophisticated than We Thought Denyse O’Leary December 12, 2022 Arts, Human Origins and Anthropology, Science 6 Neanderthals were not just downing raw hunks of meat 70,000 years ago, as many of us have assumed. Read More ›