
Vance Nelson
Articles
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1 week ago |
creation.com | Keaton Halley |Vance Nelson |Jonathan Sarfati |Joel Tay
Public domainA reappraisal of twelve examplesIn a 2016 speech, Apple CEO Tim Cook jokingly claimed he spotted someone holding an iPhone in a 17th century painting. He even showed a photo of the painting to prove it (figure 1). There, on this historic canvas, was a thin, rectangular, hand-held object of just the right size and shape. But the name of the painting, “Man handing a letter to a woman”, spoils the fun.
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Mar 19, 2024 |
creation.com | Lucien Tuinstra |Vance Nelson
This article is from Creation 45(1):12–13, January 2023 Hugo Salais / Metazoa Studio; originally published in Izquierdo-López, A., & Caron, J. B. (2022). iScience, 25(7), 104675Arthropods are creatures with an exterior skeleton and a segmented body plan. They include butterflies, centipedes, crabs, scorpions, and the extinct group trilobites.
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Mar 3, 2024 |
creation.com | Jonathan Sarfati |Carl Wieland |Vance Nelson |Michael J Oard
This article is from Creation 44(4):48–49, October 2022 The pre-Flood ocean was once filled with marine reptiles, some of which were huge. They include:Ichthyosaurs, whose name means ‘fish lizard’ (ἰχθύς ichthys = fish). These looked superficially like fish or dolphins; only the skeleton shows they were reptilian. They had a wide variety of sizes, from quite small to huge.
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Oct 1, 2023 |
creation.com | Michael J Oard |Vance Nelson |Darek Isaacs
This article is from Creation 44(3):56, July 2022 CC-BY 4.0 International by Chiarenza, A.A., Fabbri, M., Consorti, L. et al. Numerous dinosaur graveyards are found in sedimentary rocks. A recent report of a ‘herd’ of 11 duckbilled dinosaurs from a graveyard in Italy indicates how secular interpretations change with time.1 Most of the dinosaur skeletons were nearly whole with the bones together.
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Jul 17, 2023 |
creation.com | Gavin Cox |Carl L. Werner |Vance Nelson |Michael J Oard
This article is fromCreation 44(2):56, April 2022 Brittle star discovered—identical to Jurassic fossils!CC BY-ND 2.0 Jay Black/University of MelbourneA new brittle star (Ophiojura exbodi1) was discovered in 2011, in the Indo-Pacific Ocean, living on a seamount, 560 m (1860 ft) deep. Tim O’Hara (invertebrate curator at Victoria Museum, Melbourne, Australia) recognized its significance as representing “a new species, genus, and family of brittle star”.2 Instead of five arms, it has eight.
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