seedlings Type post Author David Coppedge Date August 16, 2024 CategoriesBotanyIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , Arabidopsis, auxin, breeders, China, Current Biology, genes, growth hormone, high school, intelligent design, phosphate, rice, roots, soil, wild type How Roots Become Jackhammers David Coppedge August 16, 2024 Botany, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 7 How do flimsy, tiny roots get through hard soil? A root tip hitting hardpan switches on a flurry of signals that get to work on anchorage and penetration. Read More ›
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 ›
farmer Sri Lanka Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date July 27, 2022 CategoriesBioethicsLife Sciences Tagged , agriculture, ammonia, Canada, farmers, farming, fertilizer, food production, inflation, Justin Trudeau, manure, Netherlands, nitrogen, Reuters, rice, Russia, Sri Lanka, technocrats Stifling Food Production to “Save the Planet” Wesley J. Smith July 27, 2022 Bioethics, Life Sciences 4 After Sri Lanka’s government restricted non-organic fertilizer use, the economy and government collapsed. Read More ›