chicken embryo Type post Author David Swift Date March 30, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionLife Sciences Tagged , BIO-Complexity, biologists, Casey Luskin, Charles Darwin, common ancestry, common descent, complexity, embryo, embryonic development, evolution, Evolution News, evolutionary processes, evolutionists, fish, gastrulation, homology, mammals, mutations, natural selection, PZ Myers, reptiles, Rudolf Raff, vertebrates Will Evolutionists Ever Take Falsification Seriously? A Response to P. Z. Myers David Swift March 30, 2023 Evolution, Life Sciences 6 Can there be a better example of trying to argue that whatever the evidence, evolution is the answer? Read More ›
chicken embryo Type post Author Casey Luskin Date March 23, 2023 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent DesignScience Tagged , amniotes, amphibians, BIO-Complexity, birds, bony fish, Charles Darwin, chondrichthyans, cleavage, common ancestry, development, developmental biology, Ernst Haeckel, evolution, gastrulation, homology, intelligent design, lancelets, mammals, peer-reviewed literature, phylotypic stage, primates, reptiles, Rudolf Raff, teleosts, tissues, vertebrate embryos, waiting-time problem Peer-Reviewed Paper Shows Vertebrate Embryonic Variation Contradicts Common Ancestry Casey Luskin March 23, 2023 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Science 7 Evolutionary biologists often argue that vertebrate embryos develop in highly similar manners, reflecting their common ancestry. Read More ›
hempnettle Type post Author Jonathan Wells Date February 17, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionLife Sciences Tagged , bacteria, Charles Darwin, chihuahua, Douglas Futuyma, Ernst Mayr, evolution, Galápagos Islands, Japan, Keith Stewart Thomson, Lynn Margulis, microevolution, Richard Goldschmidt, Rudolf Raff, Scott Gilbert, southern Africa, speciation, Top Scientific Problems with Evolution (series) Top Scientific Problems with Evolution: Speciation Jonathan Wells February 17, 2022 Biology, Evolution, Life Sciences 7 Swedish scientist Arne Müntzing used two plant species to make a hybrid that underwent chromosome doubling to produce hempnettle, a member of the mint family. Read More ›