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Page 16 of 19 (220 Articles)
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
Distant starlight, and dino and human fossils
The Horizon problem: the big banger’s own distant starlight problem, and more evidence against the big bang. Why are there no mass graveyards of human and dino fossils?
by Jonathan Sarfati and David Catchpoole
Panderichthys—a fish with fingers?
What of the latest ‘missing link’ offered up for fish-to-tetrapod evolution?
by Shaun Doyle
Toy car rocks million-year belief
The rock on the beach looked like any other rock–until it was turned over.
by Tas Walker
Inconvenient Neandertaloids
Awkward questions for the Out-of-Africa’ model for human evolution—a problem for evolutionists and ‘progressive’ creationists.
by Peter Line
National Geographic unveils ‘Wilma’ the Neandertal lady
Primitive? Sub-human? Even this evolutionary magazine portrays Neandertals as much more human than used to be the case.
by Carl Wieland
Taking a crack at the Neandertal mitochondrial genome
A full-length stretch of DNA from a Neandertal mitochondrion has been sequenced. Some are using it to allege that it came from a different species to modern humans. But is that deduction justified?
by Robert Carter
Doubting doubts about the Squishosaur
Were the reports of soft tissue in T. rex bones all wrong? Is it time to discard this powerful-seeming evidence? Not yet, it seems.
by Carl Wieland
The ‘Lazarus effect’: rodent ‘resurrection’!
Looking for something different? Try an Asian food market. You might be surprised …
by David Catchpoole
Another leggy snake?
Discovering leg bones in the fossil snake Eupodophis has evolutionists excited. But are leggy snakes ‘primitive’, and what have they to do with the Curse in Genesis 3?
by Jonathan Sarfati
Grass-eating dinos
How could dinosaurs have eaten grass, if it hadn’t evolved yet?
by David Catchpoole
Horseshoe crabs invented themselves?
The latest discovery of a horseshoe crab fossil has evolutionists raving.
by David Catchpoole