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Page 23 of 26 (311 Articles)
Cosmic magnets vs long-age dogma
Tetrataenite, a promising alternative to rare-earth magnets, was thought to need millions of years to form, but a lab formed it quickly.
by Jonathan Sarfati
The Dreamtime old and new
Black Mountain in Australia's Far North has inspired old myths—and modern ones too.
by Peter Geyer
William Pengelly’s Brixham cave excavations, and belief in the antiquity of man
William Pengelly’s 19th century cave excavations in Brixham, southwest England, encouraged support of the erroneous belief in the antiquity of mankind beyond the biblical timeframe.
by Andrew Sibley
Ice core oscillations and abrupt climate changes: part 2—Antarctic ice cores
How did these ‘rapid’ fluctuations measured in Antarctic ice cores arise after the Flood?
by Michael J. Oard
Gentleman geologist leads Jurassic journeys
Gavin Cox interviews Creation Geologist John Matthews about his career and experiences in the oil industry and his conversion to Christ and creationist
by Gavin Cox
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
The baobab: The strangest tree on Earth
The strangest tree on Earth
by Don Batten and Jerry Bergman
The current state of creationist ice core research
We have refuted claims the ice sheets demand an old earth, but more modelling is needed.
by Jake Hebert
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
Many flawed papers in sedimentology
Sedimentologists feel free to reinterpret data without presenting any new research, and fail to question data.
by Michael J. Oard