Journal of Creation archive > Volume 16 Issue 2
Journal of Creation
(Previously called TJ)
Volume 16, Issue 2
Published August 2002
124 pages
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Contents:
Page |
Title |
3–4 |
Watery catastrophe deduced from huge Ceratopsian dinosaur graveyard
Perspective by Michael J. Oard |
5–7 |
Globular clusters and the challenge of blue straggler stars
Perspective by Rod Bernitt |
8 |
More junk reclaimed
Perspective by Don Batten |
8–10 |
The uniformitarian mystery of radiolarian chert
Perspective by Michael J. Oard |
10–12 |
Dinosaur footprints, fish traces
and the Flood
Perspective by John Woodmorappe |
13–15 |
C4 photosynthesis—evolution or design?
Perspective by Don Batten |
15–17 |
Kuiper Belt
Objects: solution to short-period comets?
Perspective by Robert Newton |
17–20 |
Did life’s
building blocks come from outer space?
Perspective by Jonathan Sarfati |
20–21 |
The naturalistic formation of planets exceedingly difficult
Perspective by Michael J. Oard |
22–24 |
Gould grumbles
about creationist ‘hijacking’
Perspective by Don Batten |
25–27 |
Don't blame the map
A review of The Map that Changed the World: The Tale of William Smith and the Birth of a Science by Simon Winchester Book Review by Tas Walker |
28–30 |
Top-notch creation research
A review of Climates Before and After the Genesis Flood—Numerical Models and Their Implications by Larry Vardiman Book Review by Michael J. Oard |
31–36 |
Fostering fallacy A review of Reason, Science and Faith by Roger Forster & Paul Marston Book Review by Andrew S. Kulikovsky |
37–39 |
Language, lineage and the Bible
A review of Genes, Peoples and Languages by Luigi L. Cavalli-Storza Book Review by Alexander R. Williams |
40–41 |
Disappointing
discourse
A review of Genesis: A Commentary by Bruce K. Waltke Book Review by Andrew S. Kulikovsky |
42–45 |
Richard Goldschmidt's monster
Countering the Critic Article by A.W. (Bill) Mehlert |
46–53 |
The portrayal
of creationists by their evolutionist detractors
Countering the Critic Article by Philip B. Bell |
54–55 |
A bouquet for a rose?
Letter to the Editor by C. Berndt |
55 |
The crimes of Galileo
Letter to the Editor by A. Kulikovsky |
55–58 |
Protein families
Letter to the Editor by J. Warawa |
58–59 |
Is Cudi Dagh an impossible
location?
Letter to the Editor by D. Larsen |
59–61 |
Cudi Dagh not high enough
Letter to the Editor by M.J. Hunter |
61–62 |
The Ice Age and ancient maps
Letter to the Editor by J. Van Dyke |
63–68 |
Chronologies
Forum by L. McFall |
69–72 |
Could Behemoth have
been a dinosaur?
Forum by D. Porter |
73–79 |
Is the word ‘earth’
('erets) equivocal?
Forum by P.H. Seely |
79–82 |
A geocentrist replies to ‘Geocentrism
and Creation’
Forum by M. Bowden |
83 |
Evenings and mornings
Viewpoint by Andrew Kulikovsky |
84–88 |
Weasel,
a flexible program for investigating deterministic computer ‘demonstrations’
of evolution Research Note by Les Ey and Don Batten |
89–94 |
British scriptural
geologists in the first half of the nineteenth century: part 7—Rev. Samuel
Best (1802–1873) Paper by Terry Mortenson |
95–104 |
Our galaxy is
the centre of the universe, ‘quantized’ redshifts show
Paper by D. Russell Humphreys |
105–109 |
Darwin's critical influence on the ruthless extremes of capitalism
Paper by Jerry Bergman |
110–113 |
Bacterial life
in ancient salt
Paper by Evert van der Heide |
114–117 |
Can welded tuffs form underwater?
Paper by Michael J. Oard |
118–127 |
The evolution of plants: a major
problem for Darwinism
Paper by Jerry Bergman |
Published: 3 February 2006
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