Journal of Creation archive > Volume 37 Issue 3
Journal of Creation
Volume 37, Issue 3
Published December 2023
127 pages, plus bonus articles
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Contents:
Page |
Title |
3–5 |
Resolving the Archean Belts in the context of Noah’s Flood Perspective by Carl Froede, Jr, and A. Jerry Akridge |
6–8 |
Saturn’s changing rings Perspective by Wayne Spencer |
9–10 |
A new ‘marine crocodile’ discovery on the Jurassic coast of England Perspective by Andrew Sibley |
11–12 |
Circular reasoning used to date old fossils in old rocks ‘Down Under’ Perspective by Andrew J. Fabich |
13–14 |
Could humans take down mammoths with spears? Perspective by Michael J. Oard |
15–17 |
The non-evolution of the human liver Perspective by Lucien Tuinstra |
18–21 |
Petroleum systems do not require millions of years Perspective by Harry Dickens |
22 |
Post-Flood animals live above their dead Flood relatives. Letter from Stef Heerema REPLY: Michael J. Oard |
23–24 |
Rarity of long-lived post-Flood human fossils? Letter from Leo (Jake) Hebert, III REPLY: Robert Carter |
25–26 |
One-way speed of light Letter from Richard Ward REPLY: Clifford Denton |
27–28 |
Evolution as partner in evangelical academia? A review of Science and the Doctrine of Creation: The approach of ten modern theologians (Fulkerson, G.H. and Chopp, J.T. (Eds.)) Book Review by Benno Zuiddam |
29–32 |
Fine-tuned water A review of The Wonder of Water: Water’s profound fitness for life on earth and mankind (Michael Denton) Book Review by Shaun Doyle |
33–35 |
The fantasy world of eugenics: then and now A review of Control: The dark history and troubling present of eugenics (Adam Rutherford) Book Review by John Woodmorappe |
36–41 |
An evolutionist guide to the supposed hominin fossils A review of The Human Lineage, 2nd edn (Matt Cartmill and Fred H. Smith) Book Review by Peter Line |
42–44 |
David Berlinski on human uniqueness, free will, computer intelligence, and organic evolution A review of Science After Babel (David Berlinski) Book Review by John Woodmorappe |
45–47 |
Uplifting archaeology A review of Where God Came Down: The archaeological evidence (Joel P. Kramer) Book Review by Gavin Cox |
48–54 |
Who wrote Genesis?—the internal evidence Viewpoint by David Malcolm |
55–62 |
Blood clots in bones of dinosaurs and Permian tetrapods—evidence of asphyxiation? Research Note by Mark Armitage |
63–67 |
The evolution of sweat glands stymies evolutionists Essay by Jerry Bergman |
68–72 |
No evidence for heart evolution Essay by Jerry Bergman |
73–78 |
Irresolvable problems with Neo-Darwinism—experts calling for a new theory of evolution Essay by Philip B. Bell |
79–83 |
Enantiomeric amplification of L-amino acids: part 4—based on subliming valine Paper by Royal Truman |
84–89 |
Enantiomeric amplification of L-amino acids: part 5—sublimation based on serine octamers Paper by Royal Truman and Stephen Grocott |
90–92 |
Enantiomeric amplification of L-amino acids: part 6—sublimation using Asn, Thr, Asp, Glu, Ser mixtures Paper by Royal Truman |
93–101 |
Developments in paleoanthropology no. 4 Paper by Peter Line |
102–109 |
The origin of large arcs: part 2—impacts can form large arcs Paper by Michael J. Oard |
110–120 |
Mendelian speciation: part 1—what is the abundant source of significant biodiversity? Paper by Nigel E.A. Crompton, Thomas Sprague, Royal Truman, and Reinhard Junker |
121–127 |
Whales designed or evolved: part 1—the fossils Paper by Marc Surtees |
128–134 |
Amyloids having sequence-, regio-, and stereo- selective properties don’t form under plausible prebiotic conditions Bonus article by Royal Truman |
135–145 |
Prebiotically plausible peptides don’t self-assemble to produce useful catalytic amyloids Bonus article by Royal Truman and Chris Basel |
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