water pollution Type post Author David Coppedge Date June 27, 2023 CategoriesBiologyBotanyIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , animals, bacteria, biosphere, cancer, complex life, defluorination, Duke University, intelligent design, Mercury, microbes, Nature (journal), Nature Microbiology, New Scientist, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ocean, oil spills, Penn State, pollutants, pollution, Science Advances, seafood, tuna, UC Riverside, Yujie Men Gifted Microbes Elevate the Case for Intelligent Design to the Entire Biosphere David Coppedge June 27, 2023 Biology, Botany, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 7 Far from being humble, primitive steppingstones to higher life, microbes display superpowers that so-called “higher” forms of life depend on. Read More ›
microbe 1 Type post Author David Coppedge Date June 6, 2022 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , Arizona State University, bacteria, defluorination, environmentalists, intelligent design, landfills, magnetic field, magnetotactic bacteria, Michael Behe, microbes, microorganisms, nitrogen, nitrogen fixation, plastics, Secrets of the Cell, U.C. Riverside, University of Texas, waste, Yujie Men Wonderful Microbes Are the Planet’s Ecosystem Engineers David Coppedge June 6, 2022 Biology, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 7 The few pathogens among bacteria give a bad rap to the majority that do wonderful things — for us and for our environment. Read More ›