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Zenkey, zonkey, zebra donkey!
13 Aug 2014
Everyone was expecting the pregnant donkey to give birth to a donkey foal. But the newborn had … stripes!
by David Catchpoole
Bees outsmart supercomputers
19 Jan 2022
Even the best supercomputers struggle to solve the ‘Travelling Salesman Problem’. Yet bees do it as a matter of course.
by Carl Wieland
Why a butterfly flutters by
27 Nov 2013
Some might think that the butterfly, with its jerky fluttering flight, is a ‘primitive’ and inefficient flyer. Actually, their complicated wing movements generate more lift than simple flapping would do.
by David Catchpoole
A fossil is a fossil is a fossil. Right?
03 Jan 2008
Do today’s definitions of the word ‘fossil’ rule out a biblical timescale by default?
by Cecil Allen
Where was Eden?
22 May 2019
What information does the Bible give us that might help to locate Eden?
by Lita Cosner and Robert Carter
Biblical Creation—Truly, a Theory of Everything (ToE)
14 May 2013
Bible-believers have the best framework to explain the world.
by Marc Ambler
Genetic entropy and human lifespans
11 Sep 2021
If the human genome is degrading, shouldn’t lifespans be getting shorter?
by Robert Carter, Don Batten
‘Just preach the Gospel!’
08 Mar 2023
The New Testament authors preached the Gospel under a background of Genesis history. This includes the people, events, time frame, and order of events.
by Jonathan Sarfati
The water cycle
13 Nov 2017
‘Modern’ science took thousands of years to confirm details about the earth’s water cycle that the Bible had already recorded.
by Ron Neller
Is God a ‘moral monster’?
17 Mar 2014
How do we answer challenges of ‘atrocities’ in the Old Testament?
by Lita Sanders
The ‘bird of prey’ that’s not
21 Nov 2012
This fierce looking bird, with its sharp, hooked beak, and vicious ‘raptor’ talons, looks ‘obviously’ designed for tearing and devouring flesh—but it normally nibbles nuts.
by David Catchpoole
Evolutionary racism
02 Nov 2011
A revealing secular book documents the huge change in how other Australians regarded their country’s indigenous population after Darwin’s book appeared.
by Carl Wieland