The cover art of New Scientist describes a rather unpopular view of evolution that has been periodically proposed by some evolutionary scientists.
Some states have been able to protect through legislation the open discussion of controversial scientific topics, but others have been less successful.
How 60,000 homing pigeons got lost when something disturbed the sounds of silence.
The “Scars of Evolution” series featured speakers explaining how human evolution has produced an inferior product.
How do bees know which flowers to visit to load up on nectar? Which flowers have already been plundered?
The oft-evolved appendix Freedom under fire Homo erectus—the handyman Leaving Lucy Epigenetic inheritance
Scientists have long known the process of passing parental characteristics to offspring reaches a level of complexity only partially understood.
Homo erectus had style and design of their tools down to a science.
Federal government tips its hand: you have the freedom to be like others, but not necessarily the freedom to be different.
The appendix has long been maligned as an obsolete vestigial remnant of digestive evolution. Is it really as worthless as people say?
This spring is your last chance to see Lucy in the United States before she returns to her homeland.
Pigeon evolution Another forensic fantasy “Crater of doom” Pope resigns Tale of two Davids
A few years back BBC television viewers could enjoy both David Attenborough and David Bellamy bringing wildlife and plants into their homes.
Pope Benedict XVI’s announcement on Monday indicated he will become the first pope in six centuries to resign.
Dinosaur demise now confidently blamed on Chicxulub asteroid, study claims.
A study packed with anatomical data and a significant bit of whimsy attempts to explain when the ancestor of most mammals (the placental ones) evolved.
Genomic secret of the pigeon’s crest shows the power of a single mutation to produce an explosion of biodiversity.
Queries about the little feathery “what’s’it,” Neander-dates, A sudsy pond, Solar cell—“evolutionary” or revolutionary? Name-calling?
Clergy Letter Project founder inaugurates his “no name-calling” policy by misrepresenting creationists.
Despite the fact that life has never been observed emerging by random natural processes from non-living elements, most evolutionists are confident that it did.
When did Neanderthals last occupy Spain? Were they there at the same time as modern humans?
Since last week’s discussion of the feathered fossil Eosinopteryx, we have received questions about how we could consider this animal a bird.
Health column blames our propensity for physical problems on faulty body design, but evolutionary presuppositions obscure the real facts.
Fish hands? Life? So what. Molar roots and our roots Tiny dino? Martian water of life
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