Mammoth Type post Author Rob Sheldon Date April 5, 2023 CategoriesEcologyEvolutionPaleontology Tagged , “consensus science”, Arctic Ocean, Asian elephant, bison, Brave New World, carbon dioxide, CRISPR-Cas9, de-extinction, DNA, elephants, epigenetics, extinction, global warming, Great Lakes, greenhouse gas, Ice Age, marsupials, methane, North America, passenger pigeon, Pleistocene, Pleistocene Park, Sergey Zimov, settled science, Siberia, South Africa, The Atlantic, wooly mammoth Pleistocene Park: What Could Possibly Go Wrong? Rob Sheldon April 5, 2023 Ecology, Evolution, Paleontology 6 The idea is to recreate some of the DNA from the sequencing of frozen mammoths, and inject it into an Asian elephant egg. Read More ›
Centrosaurus Type post Date July 3, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionPaleontology Tagged , dinosaurs, DNA, fossilization, fossils, Gizmodo, Ian Sample, Jurassic Park, Montana, paleontologists, paleontology, Princeton University, soft tissue, The Guardian, wooly mammoth, Yukon Could We Ever Recover Dinosaur DNA? Science and Culture July 3, 2022 Evolution, Paleontology 5 There have been a number of unexpected finds from dinosaurs besides bones; some paleontologists dig hopefully. Read More ›
Lehigh-University Type post Author Michael Behe Date March 22, 2019 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, Amber Rice, bacteria, citrate, Darwin Devolves, degradative mutations, DNA, DNA repair, Dogs, E. coli, evolution, Evolution (journal), First Rule of Adaptive Evolution, genes, glucose, Greg Lang, Journal of Molecular Evolution, laboratory, Lehigh University, Lenski lab, loss-of-function mutations, machines, malaria, microbes, nature, Plasmodium falciparum, polar bear, proteins, Richard Lenski, wooly mammoth, yeast A Response to My Lehigh Colleagues, Part 1 Michael Behe March 22, 2019 Evolution, Intelligent Design 11 Their review pretty much completely misses the mark. Nonetheless, it is a good illustration of how sincere-yet-perplexed professional evolutionary biologists view the data. Read More ›