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Thunder lizards
Cinema technologies have brought mankind face-to-face with Earth’s largest-ever land animals, but what do we really know about them?
by Russell Grigg
Sea monsters … more than a legend?
Tales of unknown creatures make sense in a biblical framework of history.
by Rebecca Driver
‘Carnivorous’ dinosaurs had plant diet
Theropods, the dino group that includes T.rex, were all predators, right? No, about half of them had a salad diet! See also how they challenge dino-to-bird dogma.
by Jonathan Sarfati and Liita Cosner
Dino stumble preserved in Utah fossil trackways
Evolutionists miss obvious evidence for Noah’s Flood because of preoccupation with dino-to-bird speculation
by Tas Walker
Dinosaurs and dragons: stamping on the legends
Dragon stories from all over the world are evidence that dinosaurs have been seen by humans throughout time.
by Russell Grigg
Dino ‘puberty blues’ for paleontologists
Scientists now realize the dramatic physical changes that dino ‘teenagers’ go through.
by David Catchpoole
Thousands of Dinosaur footprints found in China
Scientists describe evidence of Noah’s Flood without realizing it.
by Tas Walker
Dragons: animals … not apparitions
Accounts of dragons in history have an amazing similarity to various types of dinosaurs.
by Timofey Alferov
Dinosaur demise did not jump start mammal evolution
Another long-cherished evolutionary ‘truth’ falls by the wayside.
by Michael J. Oard
Bird breathing anatomy breaks dino-to-bird dogma
A new discovery about bird thighs and lungs seems to be the ‘nail in the coffin’ for the popular notion that they evolved from dinosaurs.
by Jonathan Sarfati
Dino proteins and blood vessels: are they a big deal?
One blog claimed, ‘finding the rare, hardy biomolecule from dinosaurs is nothing to get excited about’. But see why proteins could survive the Flood but not eons.
by Carl Wieland and Jonathan Sarfati
Dinosaur soft tissue and protein—even more confirmation!
Mary Schweitzer announces even stronger evidence, this time from a duckbilled dino fossil, of even more proteins—and the same amazingly preserved flexible blood vessel and cell structures as before.
by Carl Wieland