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Page 35 of 38 (445 Articles)
Caterpillar wheel
When danger looms, the Pleuruptya caterpillar can transform itself into a wheel, and roll away
by David Catchpoole
Babies are born ready to learn
Are babies’ minds a blank slate or is there more to it? The latest research shows baby’s brain is prepared within the womb for communication with the world and much more.
by Lucien Tuinstra
David Attenborough’s Conquest of the Skies: The first to fly
Our response to David Attenborough’s TV programmes ‘Conquest of the Skies’. The evidence shows beetles, birds, and other fliers were created; they did not evolve.
by Russell Grigg
Amazing ammonite animatronics!
Scientists build amazing animatronic ammonite models to investigate their swimming abilities, but this demonstrates their intelligent design rather than evolution.
by Gavin Cox
Is the world perfectly designed?
Is the concept of ‘perfect design’ even a helpful way to think?
by Shaun Doyle
The last super-tusker?
Giant tusks have a giant meaning.
by David Catchpoole
Bacteria—master compass builders
These bacteria precision-build magnetic navigation aids
by David Thomas
Evolution of the neuron
Can evolution explain the origin of neurons?
by Jerry Bergman
Migratory birds use magnetic GPS
Knowing the correct direction to fly isn’t always enough
by Jonathan Sarfati
A very doctrinaire evolutionist rehashes all the canned arguments
A doctrinaire evolutionist rehashes old canards and calumnies.
by John Woodmorappe
Dance of the web-weavers
These awesome spiders are good dancers—and master architects, too.
by Philip Bell
Galápagos finches, rapid speciation, and recent creation
Darwin’s finches have been a poster child for evolution for more than a century, but recent genetic analysis reveals God’s creative brilliance and how He created species to change over time.
by Robert Carter