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The Jurassic Coast—Icon for the Genesis Flood
How an icon of secular geology provides powerful evidence for Noah’s Flood.
by
Michael Oard, John Matthews, Andrew Sibley
Praying mantis: unique stereoscopic vision
Praying mantis brain computes depth to target by comparing changing images from its two eyes
by
Jonathan Sarfati
Introduction to ID, warts and all
A review of
A Biblical Point of View on Intelligent Design
by Kerby Anderson
by
Emmett L. Williams
Fingernails and toenails—useless evolutionary relics or an important part of design?
Are they useless evolutionary relics, or important part of design?
by
Jerry Bergman
Ants: the incredible heavy-lifting champions
Amazing design allows a tiny, fragile creature to lift objects way beyond its size.
by
Cody Guitard
Homeschool conference: great encouragement and some concerns
Great encouragement from attendees at homeschool conference, yet we also experienced concerns due to false teaching about creation
by
Matthew Cserhati, Gary Bates
Over-engineering in nature: an evolutionary conundrum
Natural selection can only select for the attributes an organism needs to survive, so how is it that creatures are endowed with a whole lot more than necessary?
by
David Catchpoole
Spider decoys
These spiders are programmed to make larger duplicates of themselves and then animate them to scare and confuse predators.
by
Calvin Smith
The history of flying machines
What does it tell us about the evolution of flight?
by
Stuart Burgess
It’s an
attractive
web they weave
Did you know that the electrostatic properties of spider webs, and a ‘quirk of physics’, causes them to
actively spring towards
airborne objects?
by
David Catchpoole
T. rex
, cats, and attack-defence structures
Answering a question about the purpose of attack-defence structures like claws, and about vegetarian diets pre-Fall.
by
Gavin Cox
Electric spider flight
Spiders use electric fields in the atmosphere to help them get airborne
by
Philip Bell
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