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DISCLAIMER: The following links do not necessarily represent endorsement by the Geoscience Research Institute, but are meant to provide information from a wide range of viewpoints and expertise on scientific issues, religious issues, and the interface between the two, particularly in the area of creation and evolution.
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UC physicist honored for bridging science, religion
March 10, 2005 San Francisco Chronicle
Templeton Prize given to man who paved way for laser
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Youth drinking may hasten heart trouble
March 10, 2005 Nature (news@nature)
even a little alcohol triggers early signs of disease
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This eruption could put a tsunami in the shade
March 10, 2005 The Guardian (UK)
supervolcanos are so big they could start another ice age
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original full article: All Those Darwinian Doubts
March 9, 2005 Discovery Institute
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There are valid criticisms of evolution
March 9, 2005 Wichita Eagle
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The Metaphysics of Evolution
March 9, 2005 LewRockwell.com
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News Update/Commentary
Retrovirus Struck Ancestors of Chimps and Gorillas Millions of Years Ago, But Not Ancestral Humans
March 9, 2005 Science Daily
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Mystery Undersea Extinction Cycle Discovered
March 9, 2005 National Geographic News
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Charles Townes Wins 2005 Templeton Prize
March 9, 2005 Metanexus Institute
Nobel laureate who invented the laser and advocates the convergence of science and religion won the $1.5 million Templeton Prize
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Laser co-inventor wins $1.5 million prize
March 9, 2005 Kansas City Star (Associated Press)
Charles Townes, co-inventor of the laser and a Nobel Prize-winner in physics, was named as the recipient of a religion award billed as the world's richest annual prize
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Teens & creation/evolution: Most see God's handiwork
March 9, 2005 Baptist Press News (Southern Baptist Convention)
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Charles Townes Wins 2005 Templeton Prize
March 9, 2005 Templeton Prize, Canyon Institute for Advanced Studies (Phoenix, AZ)
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UC Berkeley Nobelist Charles Townes to receive $1.5 million Templeton Prize for linking religion and science
March 9, 2005 Media Relations, University of California, Berkeley
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Charles Townes wins 2005 Templeton Prize
March 9, 2005 PhysOrg (latest physics and technology news)
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Articles and books by Charles Townes
March 9, 2005 Greenville News (South Carolina)
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'Convergence of Science and Religion'
March 9, 2005 Think (by IBM)
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Is Evolution Compatible with the Christian Faith?
March 8, 2005 Liverpool Cathedral (UK)
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Evolution hearings advance in Kansas requires registration
March 8, 2005 Kansas City Star
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Oldest fossil human protein ever sequenced
March 8, 2005 EurekAlert!
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Bay Area Christian College to Host ''Origin of Life'' Seminar
March 8, 2005 The Christian Post
the senior research specialist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute will speak from the perspective of Intelligent Design
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Hans Bethe
March 8, 2005 Nature (news@nature)
nuclear physicist dies at 98
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Where Does Intelligent Life Come From?
March 8, 2005 Universe Today
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News Update/Commentary
Scientists unearth early skeleton
March 7, 2005 BBC News
US and Ethiopian scientists say they have discovered the fossilised remains of one of the earliest human ancestors
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Local View: Evolving sequel to Bryan's last campaign
March 7, 2005 Lincoln Journal Star
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The earth moves most for humans
March 7, 2005 Nature (news@nature)
agriculture and excavations shape the landscape more than rivers and glaciers
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US scientists battle over challenge to Darwinism
March 6, 2005 ABC News
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LETTER: Evidence isn't inconsistent with a creator of life
March 5, 2005 Baltimore Sun
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Nebraska Religious Coalition for Science Education
March 5, 2005 Creighton University, Omaha, NE
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Why science and religion should be like oil and water
March 5, 2005 Lancaster Newspapers (Pennsylvania)
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Ultra-long period seismic moment of the great December 26, 2004 Sumatra earthquake and implications for the slip process
March 5, 2005 Dept. of Geological Sciences, Northwestern University, Evanston IL
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Higher laws and the mind-boggling complexity of life
March 5, 2005 New Scientist, n.2489
Add the limits of computation to the age of the universe and what do you get? A radical take on the emergence of life.
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Ancient bacteria woken from deep Alaskan sleep
March 5, 2005 New Scientist, n.2489
a previously unknown bacterium that lay dormant in the Alaskan permafrost for 32,000 years has been revived from suspended animation
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Powerful radio pulses puzzle astronomers
March 5, 2005 New Scientist, n.2489, p.21
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'Missing' dark matter was there all along
March 5, 2005 New Scientist, n.2489
astronomers were stumped when some invisible dark matter "went missing" two years ago -- it has now turned up again, much to their relief
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Fraud accusations hit prize
March 4, 2005 The Scientist
winner of prestigious German scientific award under scrutiny after anonymous allegation
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"PALEOANTHROPOLOGY: Small but Smart? Flores Hominid Shows Signs of Advanced Brain" requires registration
March 4, 2005 Science, v.307, n.5714, p.1386-1389
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No microcephaly for Hobbit
March 4, 2005 The Scientist endocast studies suggest that overall brain shape of Homo floresiensis resembles Homo erectus
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Hopping mad over 'hobbit'
March 4, 2005 San Francisco Chronicle scientists fight over fossil skull and bones of humanlike creature
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Newspaper Article
Extinct and With Tiny Brain, but a Clever Little Relative?
March 4, 2005 New York Times
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"PALEOANTHROPOLOGY: "Hobbit" Bones Go Home to Jakarta" requires registration
March 4, 2005 Science, v.307, n.5714, p.1386
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Searching Large Spaces: Displacement and the No Free Lunch Regress (pdf)
March 4, 2005 Conceptual Foundations of Science, Baylor University
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Yellowstone Supervolcano Drama on BBC this Month
March 4, 2005 Monsters & Critics
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A powerful bursting radio source towards the Galactic Centre
March 3, 2005 Nature, v.434, p.50-52
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A modest proposal...
March 3, 2005 Nature, v.434, p.122
...for the perfection of nature
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News Update/Commentary
Hobbit was 'not a diseased human'
March 3, 2005 BBC News
the famous skeleton from Indonesia nicknamed the "Hobbit" does not belong to a modern human pygmy with a brain disease
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Evidence for organelle origin
March 3, 2005 The Scientist
genetic clues point to 'missing links' between hydrogenosomes and mitochondria
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Critics silenced by scans of hobbit skull
March 3, 2005 Nature (news@nature)
comparisons with pygmies and chimps bolster new species claim
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Remember Then, Now
March 3, 2005 National Review Online
what the eugenics movement can teach us about todays stem-cell debates
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Old Bones and Stones Never Lie
March 2, 2005 Christianity.ca
... but what about some of the people who dig them? Recent major frauds in archaeology stem from an apparent need to make our race appear older than it is.
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Is the Smithsonian promoting religion?
March 2, 2005 townhall.com