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Page 17 of 19 (221 Articles)
Colonial nesting or hurried egg laying by dinosaurs?
Can Noah’s Flood explain dinosaur eggs clumped together?
by Michael J. Oard
Ginkgo: a remarkable living fossil
With no evolutionary change over claimed hundreds of millions of years, and possessing a complex genome, the ginkgo is totally baffling to Darwinists
by Jerry Bergman
And the oldest feather belongs to … a bird
Does the oldest feather fossil found belong to a bird or a dinosaur?
by Philip Robinson
Valley of the whales
How did hundreds of fossil whales end up in the middle of a barren desert?
by Gary Bates
Neandertals weren’t ‘cave men’
Neandertals’ most famous homes were caves, but that’s not where they lived all the time.
by Lita Sanders
Ancestor bias
Non-scientific biases affect museum reconstructions
by Phil Robinson
'Earliest' ancestor of cephalopods
Could a fossil cephalopod with 10 arms be considered ancestral to today’s species of octopus?
by Lucien Tuinstra
Early victim of the ‘dinosaur-extinction impact’
The first dinosaur death is claimed to have been drowned and quickly buried due to a huge tsunami caused by the Chicxulub impact at the Yucatan peninsula.
by Lucien Tuinstra
Astounding ammonite buried in Noah’s Flood
Ammolite is a rare, iridescent, gem-quality material cut from the fossilized shells of extinct sea creatures. We have Noah’s Flood to thank for their appearance.
by Tas Walker
A dinosaur made by the Flood
The story of Ultrasaurus
by Kevin Lamoure
Dicynodonts and ‘out-of-place’ fossils
Giant mammal-like reptiles in the age of dinosaurs? Cretaceous dicynodont reclassified to Cenozoic mammal, otherwise it would be a proverbial Precambrian rabbit.
by Jonathan Sarfati
Neanderthals could hear like modern man
More evidence that Neanderthals were descended from Adam.
by Michael Oard