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Page 5 of 6 (64 Articles)
Shrews eating peppers
Another example of a natural selection favouring an information-losing mutation, which is the opposite to that required for goo-to-you evolution.
by Jonathan Sarfati
Is the RubisCO enzyme an ineffective leftover of evolution?
Some evolutionists claim that the RubisCO enzyme is an evolutionary leftover, but when we look at the details it is obviously a design element!
by Matthew Cserhati
White Squirrels?
White squirrels appear in a handful of towns in North America. How did they get there? Is it evolution? Is white fur a beneficial mutation or a curse?
by Thomas Bailey
Species were designed to change, part 2
Where do species come from? How much change is allowed? If species change, what separates creation from evolution?
by Robert Carter
The magnificent ‘flying’ frog
Whether gliding or parachuting, these forest frogs are adapted to the air
by Don Batten
Startling Sturddlefish
Sturddlefish or paddlegeon: inter-family hybridization between sturgeon and paddlefish and created kinds.
by Jonathan Sarfati
The green algae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii find safety in numbers by design
How the green algae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii demonstrates multicellularity is a design feature.
by Matthew Cserhati
Rails derail Darwinism
Flightlessness is devolution, not evolution.
by Matthew Cserhati
The last super-tusker?
Giant tusks have a giant meaning.
by David Catchpoole
Galápagos finches, rapid speciation, and recent creation
Darwin’s finches have been a poster child for evolution for more than a century, but recent genetic analysis reveals God’s creative brilliance and how He created species to change over time.
by Robert Carter
‘Scuba-diving’ lizards
These stunning reptiles can stay submerged for up to 18 minutes and can ‘rebreathe’ some of their own air
by Philip Bell
Darwin’s unpaid debt to Patrick Matthew
Did Darwin plagiarize Patrick Matthew's theory?
by Andrew Sibley