Pterosaur_fossil,_Desert_Museum.jpg Type post Author David Coppedge Date January 28, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionPaleontology Tagged , bats, BBC News, birds, Boeing 747, Current Biology, fossils, gigantism, Günter Bechly, magic, mutations, Neil Thomas, Origin, paleontologists, pterosaurs, Scleromochlus, selection, The Conversation, University of Edinburgh, University of Leicester, University of Portsmouth Magical Thinking: Can Pterosaurs Be Darwinized? David Coppedge January 28, 2025 Evolution, Paleontology 8 Neil Thomas has written about “Evolutionary Theory as Magical Thinking” and there is no shortage of examples in the literature on fossils. Read More ›
gr3_lrg Type post Author David Coppedge Date April 19, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionPaleontology Tagged , arthropods, brains, Cambrian Explosion, Cambrian News, carbon, central nervous system, Chengjiang fossils, Darwin's Doubt, Ediacaran Period, euarthropod, evolution, fossil record, Fuxianhuia protensa, intelligent design, jointed appendages, Nature Geoscience, News, Panarthropoda, Precambrian, pyrite, Stephen Meyer, taphonomy, tardigrades, University of Leicester, University of Warwick Darwin Wept: Cambrian Brains and Other Challenges for Evolution David Coppedge April 19, 2022 Evolution, Paleontology 7 Whenever you find papers and articles dealing with the Cambrian fossil record in the usual science journals, there are commonalities. Read More ›
red blood cells Type post Date June 28, 2021 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , cells, Darwinism, glycine, heme, hemoglobin, human body, lungs, mitochondria, oxygen, pandemic, PNAS, proteins, University of Bristol, University of Leicester “Designed for [a] Purpose” — Heme Production Defeats Evolution Science and Culture June 28, 2021 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 9 Hemoglobin is well known as the molecule that transfers oxygen in blood, but its precursor, heme, is lesser known. Read More ›