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The puzzle of disharmonious associations
11 Apr 2014
Why are so many Ice Age fossils found in strange climates?
by Michael J Oard
The Creation Foundation
02 Feb 2011
We hope you enjoy this sneak preview of the editorial from the soon-to-be-released Creation magazine. Subscribers will be delighted with the printed magazine’s powerful content and brilliant graphics.
by Tas Walker
Why young-age creationism is good for science
02 Apr 2010
It has the potential to improve the world of science significantly through increased accountability for speculative naturalistic scientists.
by Brett W. Smith
Evolution, creation, & thermodynamics - Part 2
Information and order, form, body, arrangement and complexity do not arise spontaneously, but are spontaneously and naturally lost.
by Carl Wieland
‘Ripples’ of galaxies—another blow to the big bang
31 Aug 2006
A cluster pattern discovered in the organization of galaxies does not support the secular story for the naturalistic origin of the universe.
by Jason Lisle
Desert varnish grows much faster than geologists admit
12 Jun 2015
Researchers scramble for another explanation after finding—contrary to expectations—that varnish forms quickly on desert rocks.
by Michael J. Oard
More secular confusion about moon’s former magnetic field
08 May 2015
It’s now non-existent and scientists are puzzled about why it had one in the first place.
by D. Russell Humphreys
From Darwin to Dover
10 Sep 2010
A review of The Creation-Evolution Debate: Historical Perspectives by Edward J. Larson
by Lita Sanders
Creation in-depth: Soft secularism is no solution
22 Nov 2013
A review of Worlds Before Adam by Martin J.S. Rudwick.
by John K Reed
That choking feeling …
by NA
New genetic information claim rebutted; and goo-to-you terminology defended
19 Sep 2009
Contrary to evolutionist claims, Richard Lenski’s citrate-digesting bacteria do not support microbes-to-man evolution.
by Don Batten and David Catchpoole
Mars’ catastrophic geology
28 Aug 2009
Flooding, volcanism, glacial movement, sedimentary deposits and even geysers point to a violent past not long ago.
by Wayne Spencer