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Page 2 of 6 (63 Articles)
Mars
Mars: a dry lifeless planet that once had huge floods.
by Dr Jonathan Sarfati
The truth about the Galileo affair
Contrary to popular opinion, Galileo was neither a martyr to science, nor the victim of a war between science and faith.
by Dominic Statham
More problems for the ‘Oort comet cloud’
Since it cannot be detected, the Oort cloud is not a scientific concept.
by Danny Faulkner
The New Pluto
As scientists digest information from Pluto, it’s obvious the planet is young and defies long-age expectations.
by David Coppedge
Created to be inhabited
An amazing number of special conditions have come together on Earth making it incredibily suitable for life.
by Mark Harwood
Kuiper Belt Objects: solution to short-period comets?
by Robert Newton
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
Evidence of a watery origin for the solar system
We hope you enjoy this sneak preview of an article from the soon-to-be-released Creation magazine. Subscribers will be delighted with the printed magazine’s powerful content and brilliant graphics.
by Andrew Rigg
Moon madness
How old is the moon? Here are five uniformitarian ‘measures’, that by any measure, expose the contradictions in the billions of years lunar ‘dating’
by Don Batten
Young Saturn
Cassini space probe destroys billion-year beliefs
by David Coppedge
The antikythera mechanism
The Antikythera Mechanism has proven to be an astonishingly complex mechanical computer capable of predicting the planets positions contradicting evolutionary ideas of primitive ancient man
by Gavin Cox
A lesson from Pluto
Going, going, gone! Lessons from a disappearing planet.
by Tas Walker