Biston-betularia Type post Author Jonathan Wells Date May 31, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionLife Sciences Tagged , body plans, camouflage, caterpillars, Charles Darwin, Current Biology, Darwinian evolution, evolution, humans, industrial melanism, larvae, Michael Majerus, New York Times, On the Origin of Species, organs, peppered moths, pollution, sampling, second coming, tree trunks Peppered Moths: It’s Déjà Vu All Over Again Jonathan Wells May 31, 2022 Biology, Evolution, Life Sciences 4 At most, the story shows a change in the proportions of two varieties of the same species. Read More ›
tree and a man Type post Author Michael Denton Date August 5, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , cells, cellulose, fire, Fire-Maker series, fitness, Goldilocks, humans, leaves, lignin, metallurgy, parsimony, photosynthesis, surface tension, tensile strength, tree trunks, water, wood Nature’s Magic and Its Breathtaking Parsimony Michael Denton August 5, 2020 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 3 Without this ensemble of fitness in nature, there would be no wood, no fire, no metallurgy, no modern technology. Read More ›
peppered moth Type post Author Robert F. Shedinger Date July 20, 2020 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , Benedikt Hallgrimsson, Bernard Kettlewell, Biston betularia, Brian K. Hall, butterflies, embryos, Ernst Haeckel, evolution, fruit flies, gene regulation, gills, Haeckel’s embryos, Icons of Evolution, intelligent design, Jerry Coyne, Jonathan Wells, Judith Hooper, junk DNA, Michael Majerus, moths, Of Moths and Men, Peter Grant, pharyngeal arches, Rosemary Grant, Strickberger’s Evolution, textbooks, tree trunks, wings, Zombie Science (book) Strickberger’s Evolution Textbook Promotes False Evolutionary Icons Robert Shedinger July 20, 2020 Evolution 8 From crippled fruit flies we move to perhaps the most pervasive icon of them all, the peppered moth. Read More ›