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Page 2 of 11 (132 Articles)
Darwin and the Fuegians
Darwin used the indigenous people of Tierra del Fuego to illustrate his ideas about human evolution. How could he have been so wrong?
by Russell Grigg
Canyon creation
Fast-forming canyons show that textbook pictures of slow and gradual processes are really just storytelling.
by Rebecca Gibson
Darwinism: it was all in the family
Darwinism began not with Charles but with his grandfather Erasmus.
by Russell Grigg
The Bright Angel Trail trackways
These recently discovered tracks at the Grand Canyon show yet more strong evidence for a massive watery catastrophe.
by Paul Price
How old is Grand Canyon?
Uniformitarian theories fail adequately to explain the origin or age of this amazing landscape feature.
by Michael J. Oard
Vampire finches of the Galápagos
If you think finches are cute birds that eat seeds, then check out the ones on Wolf Island.
by David Catchpoole
The Ark Van ministry
Travelling Australia and the world beyond talking about Noah and the Ark.
by N/A
Do Greenland ice cores show over one hundred thousand years of annual layers?
Do Greenland ice cores show over one hundred thousand years of annual layers?
by Michael J Oard
Radio-dating in Rubble
How the explosive, 1980 eruption of Mt St Helens demolished radio-isotope dating.
by Keith Swenson
Coal, volcanism and Noah’s Flood
by Dr Andrew Snelling and John Mackay
German imperialism and the African Holocaust
The Nazi Holocaust was not an anomaly—it was the last in a long line of racial genocides fuelled by Darwin’s ideas.
by Bill Johnson
‘The dingo’s got my baby!’
Carl Wieland chats with Lindy Chamberlain-Creighton.
by Carl Wieland