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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
Wandering wolves
Could the reintroduction of wolves into an area they once roamed increase numbers of their prey?
by Lucien Tuinstra
Arthropod responses to the 1980 eruption of Mount St Helens—implications for Noahic Flood recovery
What can the response of arthropods to the 1980 eruption of Mount St Helens tell us about post-Flood ecological recovery?
by Keith H. Swenson
Kangaroos in India?
Rock art in India depicting kangaroos supports the Bible.
by Philip Robinson
The amazing bombardier beetle
God’s engineering marvel that inspired new spray system designs.
by Andy McIntosh
Fantastic far-reaching foxtrot
How an arctic fox’s far-reaching migration testifies to the post-Flood dispersion
by Philip Robinson
Phytogeography and zoogeography—rafting vs continental drift
Was it by rafting or continental drift?
by Dominic Statham
The tapir
‘Primitive’? A ‘hodge-podge of leftovers’? Or something else?
by David Catchpoole
The Red Blanket
The furry carnivore which rapidly spread across the globe.
by Philip Robinson
Braterman ‘slam dunk’ flunk
Retired anti-creationist professor gives grade ‘F’ advice to followers.
by Andrew Lamb
Post-Flood log mats potentially can explain biogeography
Animals dispersing around the world by either land bridges or rafting is accepted by both creationists and secularists.
by Michael J Oard
Migration after the Flood
Observations of biogeography fit the biblical account of Earth history better than the evolutionary story.
by Dominic Statham