If size is a measure of evolutionary progress, things seem to have gone downhill since many fossils were deposited. Super salamander: A salamander as big as a car? That’s what was reported by the BBC News,Science Magazine and other news sites. Multiple fossils … Continue reading
A powerful new resource from Ray Comfort by Lita Cosner In the broader culture, it is assumed that evolution is a fact, and creation is a religious belief. But when Ray Comfort takes to the streets with his iconic camera and … Continue reading
The Great Salt Lake and other large extinct inland seas in the desert remain a challenge to explain by conventional geology. A press release from Stanford University suggests that “Tropical rain may have formed Utah’s Great Salt Lake, says Stanford Researcher,” but … Continue reading
This week’s just-so story is, “How the kitty got its stripes.” All the news are on it; they just don’t answer the question. News media are not the least embarrassed to invoke the Kipling just-so story formula, “how the x got its y.” … Continue reading
How did life begin? For those who reject the testimony of Genesis, the search is restricted to clues in nature. One such clue is the minimum essentials required for growth and reproduction. If that number is small enough, then life … Continue reading
Radioactive isotopes are commonly portrayed as providing rock-solid evidence that the earth is billions of years old. Since such isotopes are thought to decay at consistent rates over time, the assumption is that simple measurements can lead to reliable ages. … Continue reading
A student’s view of a cell under a light microscope is misleading. It reveals only a tiny fraction of what is really going on. Within that package of life, invisible to the student’s gaze, complex machines work together in cellular … Continue reading
For decades the general population has been informed that numerous “scientific” evidences prove beyond all doubt that the age of the Earth should be measured in billions of years instead of thousands. We have been told that dating methods, such … Continue reading
According to the early chapters of Genesis, people who lived prior to the great Flood enjoyed very long life spans compared to today. Ideas regarding the mechanisms of that long life have focused on possible atmospheric effects on longevity, such … Continue reading
Not All Science is Equally ‘Scientific’ Scientists have argued a great deal about the cause of death of the famous Egyptian pharaoh, Tutankhamun.1 For many years, people believed that the boy-king had died from a haemorrhage, following a blow to … Continue reading
According to Jonah Lehrer,1 there is a serious problem with much of our scientific research—the ‘decline effect’. Increasingly, many ‘well-established facts’ are coming into question. Despite the original data sets indicating the validity of certain findings, even ‘beyond reasonable doubt’, … Continue reading
Quite often when evolutionists and creationists talk there is a plasticity involved and ad hoc explanations abound. For example a young-universe creationist, when asked to explain distant starlight, might proffer as an explanation the “mature universe,” the “decaying speed of … Continue reading
Here we go again folks! The rock solid facts of evolution aren’t as rock solid after all. The site of human origins is once again bouncing to another new location. It’s kind of like watching a game of ping pong … Continue reading
Introduction Jean Louis Agassiz (1807-1873) is regarded as one of the greatest scientists of the 19th century. A founding father of the modern American scientific establishment, Agassiz was also a lifelong opponent of Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution. Agassiz “ruled … Continue reading
by Brian Thomas The brain has for a long time been compared to man-made computers in its astounding ability to process, store, and route information. But a new imaging technique has revealed that just one brain’s connections and capacities far … Continue reading