©Copyright 2018 GEOSCIENCE RESEARCH INSTITUTE
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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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Surprise discovery of highly developed structure in the young universe
March 2, 2005 EurekAlert!
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'Detectives' differ sharply in 'intelligent design' debate
March 2, 2005 Lancaster New Era (Pennsylvania)
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Book
Early Responses to Hume (10 vols.)
March 1, 2005 Thoemmes Continuum
see also Amazon
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MITs Burgeoning Faithful
March 1, 2005 Technology Review
life groups are the backbone of Campus Crusades presence at MIT
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The Darwinian Interlude
March 1, 2005 Technology Review
in early times horizontal gene transfer, the sharing of genes between unrelated species, was prevalent ... reductionist biology has been practiced for the last hundred years ... a new biology based on communities and ecosystems rather than on genes and
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"Mount St. Helens 25th Anniversary Conference" (pdf)
March 1, 2005 Acts & Facts, v.34, n.3, p.1-2
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"The Ultimate Proof of Christianity (The Resurrection of Jesus)"
March 1, 2005 Back to Genesis, n.195a (Institute for Creation Research)
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"When Did the Mountains Rise?"
March 1, 2005 Back to Genesis, n.195b (Institute for Creation Research)
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Recent Rapid Uplift of Today's Mountains
March 1, 2005 Impact, n.381 (Institute for Creation Research)
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Surprising Footprints in Old Sand
March 1, 2005 New York Times
"The finding suggests that animals adapted to a new life on land more quickly, at least on evolutionary time scales, than was thought."
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EPIGENETICS: It's not all in the DNA
March 1, 2005 Nature Reviews Genetics, v.6, n.3, p.165
genetic parallels between organisms are often described by the similarity of their genome sequences, but this view might not be the full story
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Creationism, pluralism and the compromising of science
March 1, 2005 spiked
the trouble with 'teaching the controversy'
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Vital organs gave snakes their venom
March 1, 2005 Nature (news@nature)
specific toxins evolved from tweaks to key proteins
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CSI to Go Digging for Dinosaurs
March 1, 2005 Impact (Coral Ridge Ministries)
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Absolute Intelligence
March 1, 2005 Opposite Approach Publications see also Amazon
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How Did Humans First Alter Global Climate?
March 1, 2005 Scientific American
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Book
Chernobyl: Catastrophe, Consequences and Solutions
March 1, 2005 Springer Praxis
see also Amazon
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Misconceptions about the Big Bang
March 1, 2005 Scientific American
Baffled by the expansion of the universe? You're not alone. Even astronomers frequently get it wrong.
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The Fossil Fallacy
March 1, 2005 Scientific American
creationists' demand for fossils that represent "missing links" reveals a deep misunderstanding of science
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Drilling San Andreas
March 1, 2005 Discover, v.26, n.3
a two-mile-deep tunnel boring into Americas most infamous fault may help explain why earthquakes happen and when
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A Naturalists Paradise
March 1, 2005 Discover, v.26, n.3
in a wonderland called Madagascar, a modern-day Darwin discovers hundreds of new species
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review: Jim Wenger
March 1, 2005 The Real Issue
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Beyond the Brain
March 1, 2005 National Geographic
what goes on within the human skull is more complex and fantastic than anyone imagined
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Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Flight
March 1, 2005 Royal Ontario Museum
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Creation-Evolution Headlines
March 1, 2005 Master Plan Productions
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"Is Bacterial Resistance to Antibiotics an Appropriate Example of Evolutionary Change?"
March 1, 2005 Creation Research Society Quarterly, v.41, n.4, p.318-326
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Book
The Scientific Legacy of Fred Hoyle
March 1, 2005 Cambridge University Press
see also Amazon
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3D seismic reflection mapping of the Silverpit multi-ringed crater, North Sea
March 1, 2005 Geological Society of America Bulletin, v.117, n.3, p.354-368
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Clergy Letter Project
March 1, 2005 Michael Zimmerman (University of Wisconsin)
the misperception that science and religion are inevitably in conflict has created unnecessary division and confusion
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"Humans as geologic agents: A deep-time perspective"
March 1, 2005 Geology, v.33, n.3, p.161-164
human activity (agricultural and construction) now erodes rock, soil, and sediment at about 15 times the rate of natural processes
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Book
An Intelligent Person's Guide to Genetics
March 1, 2005 Overlook Press
see also Amazon
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review: Brain-Based Values
March 1, 2005 American Scientist
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One Longsome Argument
March 1, 2005 Skeptical Inquirer
By any objective measure, the evolution of species ranks among the most successful scientific theories ever. So why is the message not getting through?
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Book
Natural Hazards
March 1, 2005 Cambridge University Press
see also Amazon
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Book
The Watch on the Heath: Science and Religion Before Darwin
March 1, 2005 Harper Collins
see also Amazon
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Book
No Easy Answers: Science and the Pursuit of Knowledge
March 1, 2005 University of Pittsburgh Press
see also Amazon
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Book
Conflict in the Cosmos: Fred Hoyle's Life in Science
March 1, 2005 Joseph Henry Press (National Academies Press)
see also Amazon
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Book
Einstein and Culture
March 1, 2005 Humanity Books (Prometheus)
see also Amazon
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Book
Conflict in the Cosmos: Fred Hoyle's Life in Science
March 1, 2005 Joseph Henry Press (National Academies Press)
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Book
The Grand Contraption: The World as Myth, Number, and Chance
March 1, 2005 Princeton University Press
see also Amazon
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"Is Bacterial Resistance to Antibiotics an Appropriate Example of Evolutionary Change?"
March 1, 2005 Creation Research Society Quarterly, v.41, n.4, p.318-326
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Book
Evolution of Fossil Ecosystems
March 1, 2005 University of Chicago Press
see also Amazon
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Geology & Genesis: A Historical Perspective on the Interaction of Two Historical Sciences (pdf)
March 1, 2005 Baylor University
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Flores hominid bones returned
February 28, 2005 The Scientist
handover is unlikely to resolve scientific and ethical issues over Homo floriensis
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Atheism worldwide in decline
February 28, 2005 Insight (United Press International)
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Time Bandits
February 28, 2005 New Yorker
What were Einstein and Gödel talking about?
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Mars: Not dead but very much alive
February 26, 2005 New Scientist, n.2488
a frozen sea, glaciers on its tallest volcano and young lava fields all suggest the planet is geologically active
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Astronomers claim first 'dark galaxy' find
February 26, 2005 New Scientist, n.2488
It contains enough matter to give birth to tens of millions of stars, so why are all the lights staying off?
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Room for seven on trip to the heavens
February 26, 2005 New Scientist, n.2488, p.26
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Neutrinos to spy on planet's core
February 26, 2005 New Scientist, n.2488, p.21