Carpenter ant colonies evade zombie apocalypse because only the climbing dead become weapons of mass dispersion.
It’s a common caricature in textbooks, movies, and—more true than ever today—TV shows: a brow-ridged, (often) club-carrying Neanderthal, covered in thick, messy red hair.
Science fiction author Ben Bova offers a few explanations for why our search for extraterrestrial life (which is growing more robust with time) has turned up nothing so far.
Scientists publishing in the journal Genetics last week have showed that “[m]any more genes separate humans from chimpanzees than scientists believed.”
What can we learn from boasts of “artificial” life, a geological rush job, a Jurassic dragon, a not-so-useless organ, and the “fear” of evolution?
Researchers are confused as to what a giant, duck-billed, many-toothed dinosaur would eat.
A team at the University of Leeds in England has engineered a spray nozzle that replicates the bombardier beetle’s (in)famous defense mechanism.
His name notwithstanding, the current legal case for the personhood of Mr. Matthew Hiasl Pan (a chimp) is in jeopardy, reports the Associated Press from Vienna, Austria.
A team reporting this week in the journal Nature announces the discovery of the remains of four individuals found at the site of a medieval castle at Dmanisi in the former Soviet republic of Georgia.
Underwater volcanoes spewing oxygen-devouring gases delay the evolutionary timetable, according to a new study.
National Geographic News reports on a new model, published online in last week’s Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, that removes the need for liquid water in explaining the “unusual” geysers on Enceladus’s south pole.
Astronomers looking at galaxies far, far away have found five that don’t quite fit big-bang ideas.
A University of Florida study focusing on genes that control “how and where body parts develop in animals” has resulted in evidence that the genetic “potential” to grow fingers and toes is found in sharks as well as bony fish.
Recent research suggests that Great Britain was formed as the result of a megaflood.
The exoplanetary-analysis community is buzzing with news this week of the possible discovery of water on HD189733b, an exoplanet 64 light-years from earth.
NASA scientists’ recent assert that Saturn’s moon Hyperion is home to “cup-like craters filled with hydrocarbons that may indicate more widespread presence in our solar system of basic chemicals necessary for life.”
Sunday’s Cincinnati Enquirer included an insightful and forthright Creation Museum write-up by Enquirer columnist Peter Bronson.
“A close-up view of the human genome has revealed its innermost workings to be far more complex than first thought,” reports a BBC NEWS article on a recent Encyclopaedia of DNA Elements (Encode) study.
Japanese and American researchers announced a “reprogramming” technique that has rendered fetal mouse cells “indistinguishable” from embryonic stem cells.
Primatologist Robin Crompton and graduate student Susannah Thrope are rekindling a “30-year-old hypothesis that upright walking first evolved in the trees.”
Description of the opening day events here at the Creation Museum.
Stanley Miller, partial namesake of the Miller–Urey experiment, has passed on at the age of 77.
Research conducted by doctoral student Mark Fitzpatrick of the University of Toronto at Mississauga is uncovering how more unique individuals of a species enjoy a survival advantage.
Answers in Genesis is an apologetics ministry, dedicated to helping Christians defend their faith and proclaim the good news of Jesus Christ.