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Page 34 of 38 (445 Articles)
Egyptian mummies and Hebrew perfume
New discoveries at Saqqara, Egypt help shed light on ancient mummification practices, ancient chemistry, regional botany, and ancient global trade connections.
by Robert Carter
The not-so-ponderous pelican
These masters of the intricate dance between waves, wind, gliding, and long-distance air travel show design, not evolution.
by Michael Eggleton
Forever young, a vain hope without God?
Is the pursuit of youth a vain hope? Is there scientific merit to the idea of living much longer than we do today?
by Lucien Tuinstra
Tremendous trilobites
Amazing eyes show amazing design and confound evolution
by Gavin Cox
Bats ‘see’ the earth’s magnetic field
Do bats have a sixth sense? Turns out they can ‘see’ earth’s magnetic field with the cornea of their eyes. Small magnetite particles feature as a ‘compass needle’.
by Lucien Tuinstra
The beautiful complexity of the human eye
Evolutionists have attacked the eye as ‘badly designed’, but the facts show precisely the opposite.
by Jonathan Corrado
The Road Runner
Meet the Real Roadrunner: Not Just a Cartoon Character. Discover the fascinating life of the roadrunner, its incredible speed, hunting skills, superstitions.
by Jeffrey Dykes
Dynamic drones
A new drone using flapping ‘wings’ for lift has many advantages.
by Gavin Cox
Wandering wolves
Could the reintroduction of wolves into an area they once roamed increase numbers of their prey?
by Lucien Tuinstra
Smart slime
The single-celled slime mold Physarum polycephalum has a memory, and makes smart decisions, yet lacks a central nervous system.
by David Catchpoole
Sharkcano!
Sharks thriving—in an active underwater volcano
by Clare Williams
Doppelgänger protein ‘Signal Recognition Particle 14’ refutes evolution
Present problems for evolution.
by Matthew Cserhati