Venus_Flytrap_showing_trigger_hairs Type post Author David Coppedge Date August 16, 2023 CategoriesBiologyBotanyEngineeringIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , bioelectricity, C. elegans, codes, communication, cows, Current Biology, Darwinism, Dionaea muscipula, Duke University, human body, information, Linköping University, Michael Faraday, microbes, Phys.org, rabbits, Science Advances, Sweden, ticks, Velcro, Venus flytrap Bioelectricity Gives Biologists a Jolt David Coppedge August 16, 2023 Biology, Botany, Engineering, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 7 We’ve explored bioelectricity in cells. We’ve looked at it within the human body. Now, electrical engineering is being found in the realms between. Read More ›
Tachypleus_gigas Type post Date June 8, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , American Chemical Society, arachnids, Australia, cancer, dragline silk, horseshoe crabs, Jurgen Otto, mites, Nature Communications, scorpions, spiders, ticks, toxins, University of Melbourne, University of Queensland, venom Make Like a Scorpion, and Other Arachnid Designs Science and Culture June 8, 2020 Intelligent Design 9 Long shunned for their bites and toxins, arachnids are gaining respect for biomimetic inspiration. Read More ›