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Central Greenland Recently Ice-Free, But Why? - Oct 21, 2024
/article/central-greenland-recently-ice-freeJake Hebert, Ph.D. - Microfossil willow wood, fungi, insect body parts, and a poppy seed have been recovered from sediments at the bottom of central Greenland’s two-mile-long GISP2 ice core.1,2 This find is similar to an earlier discovery of such fossils found...
''Surprisingly Recent'' Lunar Volcanism? - Oct 10, 2024
/article/recent-lunar-volcanismJake Hebert, Ph.D. - Tiny volcanic glass beads suggest “surprisingly recent” lava flows on the moon that are “difficult to reconcile with the accepted history of lunar volcanism.”1,2 These tiny glass beads were retrieved by the Chinese...
Methuselah-Like Longevity in Pre-Flood Mammals - Oct 7, 2024
/article/methuselah-like-longevity-pre-floodJake Hebert, Ph.D. - Genesis claims that people in the pre-Flood world routinely attained 900-year lifespans. The best-known example is Methuselah, who had the longest recorded lifespan of 969 years (Genesis 5:27). Skeptics dismiss these great ages as fanciful...
Fossil Sharks Show Signs of Greater Past Longevity - Aug 30, 2024
/article/fossil-sharks-signs-longevityJake Hebert, Ph.D. - Some fossil sharks grew very large.1 Researchers estimate Otodus megalodon, popularized by the Meg movies, was at least 46 feet long and possibly more than 66 feet. By way of comparison, the largest known extant great white shark is thought...
Do Tiny Mammal Fossils Corroborate Pre-Flood Longevity? - Aug 15, 2024
/article/tiny-mammal-fossils-corroborate-longevityJake Hebert, Ph.D. - Tooth growth patterns in fossils of the mouse-like Jurassic mammal Krusatodon show that it grew slowly and had a “surprisingly long” lifespan compared to mammals of similar size today.1 A paper in Nature describes two...
Humans Butchered Giant “Armadillos” - Aug 2, 2024
/article/humans-butchered-giant-armadillosJake Hebert, Ph.D. - Analysis of cut marks on Ice Age bones of a large armadillo-like glyptodont from Argentina suggests that humans killed and used these creatures for food.1,2 The cut marks belonged to fossil remains of a glyptodont in the genus Neosclerocalyptus...
New Evidence for Catastrophic Plate Tectonics (CPT)? - Jul 8, 2024
/article/new-evidence-for-catastrophic-plate-tectonicsJake Hebert, Ph.D. - Geophysicist Samantha Hansen and colleagues may have just strengthened evidence for catastrophic plate tectonics (CPT), the leading theoretical model for explaining the Genesis Flood.1 Almost 40 years ago, creation scientist and geophysicist Dr....
Intelligently Designed Flapping Frequencies - Jul 1, 2024
/article/intelligently-designed-flapping-frequenciesJake Hebert, Ph.D. - Physicists at Roskilde University in Denmark have shown that a single equation correctly describes the frequency of wing and fin strokes for a wide array of flying and swimming creatures, including birds, insects, bats, and whales.1,2 They used a...
Webb Telescope Discovers Another Record-Breaking Galaxy - Jun 13, 2024
/article/recordbreakinggalaxyJake Hebert, Ph.D. - Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope have recently confirmed that two galaxies are extremely distant, with one becoming the new record holder as the most distant galaxy from Earth.1,2 The new record-holding galaxy is designated as...
A Giant Ichthyosaur: Largest Ever Marine Reptile? - May 13, 2024
/article/giant-ichthyosaur-largest-ever-marine-reptileJake Hebert, Ph.D. - Paleontologists have discovered portions of a giant ichthyosaur’s lower jawbone on Blue Anchor Beach at the southern entrance to the United Kingdom’s Bristol Channel.1,2 Although ichthyosaurs have a superficial resemblance to...