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Page 4 of 5 (57 Articles)
Solar system origin: Nebular hypothesis
Naturalism has many problems in explaining both stars and any planets around them.
by Jonathan Sarfati
Will comet Elenin destroy us?
Simple physics shows that a comet as far away as Venus, and billions of times less massive, won’t be noticeable in the slightest.
by Dr Jonathan Sarfati
Mars
Mars: a dry lifeless planet that once had huge floods.
by Dr Jonathan Sarfati
A lesson from Pluto
Going, going, gone! Lessons from a disappearing planet.
by Tas Walker
Saturn—the ringed planet
This beautiful giant ringed planet baffles evolutionary astronomers.
by Spike Psarris
Jupiter: King of the planets and testament to our Creator
This beautiful giant planet baffles evolutionary astronomers.
by Spike Psarris
Mars’ catastrophic geology
Flooding, volcanism, glacial movement, sedimentary deposits and even geysers point to a violent past not long ago.
by Wayne Spencer
Galileo Quadricentennial
On the 400th anniversary of Galileo turning his telescope to the heavens, misotheists gloated about ‘science vs. religion’. But it was science vs. science, and Galileo never renounced his faith.
by Jonathan Sarfati
‘Backwards’ comet perplexes scientists
The recent discovery of a comet dubbed ‘Dracula’ has left evolutionary scientists scratching their heads as to its origins.
by David Catchpoole
Venus: Cauldron of fire
The beautiful morning and evening star holds a fiery secret underneath its cloudy veil—a world so hot that lead will melt at its surface.
by Jonathan Sarfati
Magnetic Message from Mercury
Measurements of Mercury’s magnetic field should further test a creation-based model that has already correctly predicted the fields of other planets far better than evolutionary models.
by D. Russell Humphreys
Earth is ‘too special’?
Evolutionists propose that Earth formed by itself from dust particles colliding together. But astronomers are realizing that this just-so story requires some incredibly unlikely ‘coincidences’.
by Jonathan Sarfati