Explore
Fossils
Back to Topics
Page 12 of 18 (213 Articles)
Roraima pollen
An evolutionary paradox still not solved.
by Emil Slivestru
Dinosaur soft tissue gets ‘ironic’ response
The significant amount of soft tissue being found in dinosaur bones is causing evolutionists to grasp at straws in order to explain its existence.
by Calvin Smith
Index fossils—really?
Reliable indicators of age in the rocks?
by Gordon Howard
Double-decade dinosaur disquiet
A sneak preview from the soon-to-be-released Creation magazine. For twenty years now, dino bones have progressively divulged their contents to researchers who did not expect to find the likes of DNA and radiocarbon ‘millions of years’ after dinosaur extinction.
by David Catchpoole
Salamanders are ‘living fossils’!
How can something long known to be living, be dubbed a ‘living fossil’?
by David Catchpoole
Mammoth clones coming to a zoo near you
An attraction coming to a zoo near you?
by Rob Carter
Alligator ancestor antics
A fossil skull found with dinosaurs is identical to a modern American alligator, but was given a different scientific name, giving the illusion of evolution.
by Don Batten
Slow fish in China
The fossil find in China now confirms that fish appear suddenly in the fossil record along with all the other kinds of animals.
by Tas Walker
Big-eye brain-less Neandertal nonsense
Bigger eyes in Neandertals didn’t mean they had less brain.
by David Catchpoole, Don Batten
Hundreds of jellyfish fossils!
In chapter 10 of his Origin of Species, Charles Darwin made a prediction: “No organism wholly soft can be preserved.” He’s been proven wrong—big time.
by David Catchpoole
Gladiator—an ‘extinct’ insect is found alive
‘How often do you get to investigate a fossil that has come to life?’ asks one scientist. Good question.
by David Catchpoole
Analysis of Walt Brown’s Flood model
Analysis and critique.
by Michael J Oard