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Page 4 of 5 (49 Articles)
Do koalas prove that humans got part of their DNA from viruses?
Koalavirus likely not example of invasive genetic element but rather part of the genome’s overall design.
by Matthew Cserhati
The surprisingly complex tRNA subsystem: part 1—generation and maturation
Their formation is a ‘chicken and egg’ problem for evolution.
by Royal Truman
Many paths lead to high-altitude adaptation
Discover how many paths lead to it.
by Jean K. Lightner
Monkeying around with human embryos?
Modern science allows us to perform experiments on human embryos that are contrary to Scripture. What should our response be?
by Dr Robert Carter
The surprisingly complex tRNA subsystem: part 2—biochemical modifications
Raw tRNAs are not enough; they need dozens of biochemical to function.
by Royal Truman
The hemizygosity hypothesis—a novel genetic paradigm for baranomes
A novel genetic paradigm for how the created kinds diversified after the Flood
by Peer Terborg
Doppelgänger protein ‘Signal Recognition Particle 14’ refutes evolution
Present problems for evolution.
by Matthew Cserhati
The surprisingly complex tRNA subsystem: part 4—tRNA fragments regulate processes
tRNAs and their fragments precisely regulate many cell processes.
by Royal Truman
The surprisingly complex tRNA subsystem: part 3—quality control mechanisms
Their formation is a ‘chicken and egg’ problem for evolution.
by Royal Truman
Naturally caffeine-free tea
The Economist claims the Hongyacha tea plant has made an “evolutionary journey towards losing caffeine”
by James Hughes and Robert Carter
The surprisingly complex tRNA subsystem: part 5—evolutionary implausibility
How plausible is evolution as an explanation of the tRNA subsystem?
by Royal Truman
What proportion of the human genome is actually functional?
The functional proportion of the genome is higher than evolutionists want, but much of the genomic sequence is unconstrained and unaffected by natural selection.
by Robert Carter