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Defining terms
‘Natural selection’ and ‘evolution’ can mean different things to different people. A leading evolutionist who tried to fix the problem has been largely ignored—unfortunately.
by David Catchpoole
Helpful animals
When creatures work together to help one other, it defies evolutionary predictions.
by Robert Doolan
Why the elephant is losing its tusks (and it’s not evolution!)
Why the elephant is losing its tusks (and it’s not evolution!)
by David Catchpoole
Weasel, a flexible program for investigating deterministic computer ‘demonstrations’ of evolution
by Les Ey and Don Batten
The Sulawesi bear cuscus
What has eyes like a lemur, a body like a koala, is often called a ‘marsupial monkey’, and shares its island home with pigs and dwarf buffaloes?
by Paula Weston and Carl Wieland
What! … no potatoes?
Governments are recognising the need to preserve the ‘wild’ varieties of our food plants, with their rich stores of information. Plant scientist Dr Don Batten explains how this highlights the fallacy of evolution.
by Don Batten
Brisk biters
by Carl Wieland
Bighorn horns not so big
Much to trophy-hunters’ disappointment, bighorn sheep on Ram Mountain are not what they were. But is it evolution?
by David Catchpoole
Isn’t it obvious? Natural selection can eliminate, but never create!
Candid evolutionists have publicly recognized the obvious: natural selection is a process of elimination, not creation.
by David Catchpoole
Rapid tomcod ‘evolution by pollution’?
There’s something ‘fishy’ about how the word ‘evolution’ is used …
by Carl Wieland
Where have all the big fish gone?
If you’re a fisherman who reckons that fish are now smaller, and there are fewer of them around, you’re very likely right.
by David Catchpoole
Tibetan snow lotus
Is the Tibetan snow lotus evolving to elude detection?
by David Catchpoole