Monday, 30 November 2020

Lizards Pollinate South Africa’s Hidden Flower


Image courtesy of R Cozien and S Johnson, fair use doctrine.

 

Joel Kontinen 


Three years ago, PhD candidate Ruth Cozien and her husband Dr Timo van der Niet were attending a citizen science workshop high up in South Africa’s Drakensberg mountains when they stumbled across “this weird plant with green flowers hidden beneath its leaves, a really strong scent and enough nectar to drown an insect”, Cozien recalls. Its called Guthriea capensis. 

Together they persuaded Dr Sandy-Lynn Steenhuisen at the University of the Free State’s department of plant sciences and Prof Steven Johnson of the Centre for Functional Biodiversity at KwaZulu-Natal. 

They went on an animal – plant discovery, They found that a the Drakensberg crag lizard (Pseudocordylus subviridis) pollinated the flower.

They also found that that after a few weeks there were 95% fewer fruits on the plants not visited by lizards.

Yes, it seems that God has a way of getting lizards to fertilize the flower.

Source:

Dall, Nick, 2020, , Is It A Bird? Is It A Bee? No, It's A Lizard Pollinating South Africa's 'Hidden Flower'The Guardian  25 November,



Saturday, 28 November 2020

Early Bird Had A Toucan Like Beak


Image courtesy of Mark Witton, fair use doctrine.,

Joel Kontinen

Evolutionists are claiming that the toucan beak of an early bird is an example of convergent evolution. It lived at the time of the dinosaurs, some 68 million year ago,

Researchers found the bird's partial but "exquisitely preserved" skull in 2010 in a block of muddy sandstone. They didn't CT scan it until 2017, Patrick O'Connor said. In that moment, they realized this 3-inch-long (8.5 centimeters) skull — so small it could fit in the palm of your hand — had "a beak never before seen in the Mesozoic," study co-researcher Alan Turner, associate professor of anatomy at Stony Brook University in New York.

"Falcatakely made up its face with the same bones and in a similar way as an animal like Velociraptor did," Turner said. "What is remarkable is that with this ancestral arrangement of bones, Falcatakely evolved a beak shape strongly reminiscent of modern birds with high, long upper bills."

 

Evolutionist did not expect to see such diversity among bird of that time, But take away the millions of years, This looked just like a modern bird,


Source:

Geggel, Laura. 2020.  Dino-era bird had the head of a Velociraptor and beak of a toucan. Live Science 26 November


Thursday, 26 November 2020

Its Lonely In The Universe


Image courtesy of NRAO/AUI/NSF, CC BY 3.0

Joel Kontinen


Finding signs of other civilisations in the universe can be possible, if you’re an evolutionist,

Based on our own technological capabilities, we can extrapolate what signals alien technology might emit, and search for those.

These signs are called technosignatures, and our efforts in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) revolve around them, particularly in radio wavelengths.

Now, Margot and his team recently conducted a search for technosignatures using the Green Bank Telescope, a powerful radio telescope in West Virginia.

In April of 2018 and 2019, for a total observing time of four hours, they homed in on 31 Sun-like stars around the galactic plane, detecting a total of 26,631,913 candidate technosignatures.

A closer analysis of the data revealed that every single one of those candidate technosignatures was generated right here on Earth. 

Technosignatures were created by humans on Earth.


Source:

 Starr,  Michelle. 2020. Astronomers detect millions of signals from an intelligent civilization: UsLive Science   20 November


Tuesday, 24 November 2020

Haeckel Beats Piltdown Man In Scientific Frauds


 Illustration courtesy of John Cooke in 1915, public domain,

Joel Kontinen

What is the greatest scientific fraud of all time? It seems that they almost had to do with Charles Darwin. A few years back National Geographic had a essay of the well-known hoaxes of all tines. Darwin took the first place, and even the second was his.

National Geographic said that Piltdown Man  was the  number one.

What should we say to  Earnest Haeckel, whose drawing have inspired Darwinians for over 140 years? 

Source:

Klinghoffer David. 2020, Science Frauds Go, Haeckel Beats Piltdown Man. Evolution News And Science Today 9 November.

Sunday, 22 November 2020

Canada Kills Babies But Protects Unborn Chimps

 

Image courtesy of Muhammad Mahdi Karim, GFDL 1.2.

Joel Kontinen


“There is a healthy and an unhealthy love of animals: and the nearest definition of the difference is that the unhealthy love of animals is serious,” G.K. Chesterton wrote in his 1920 book of essays The Uses of Diversity. “I am quite prepared to love a rhinoceros, with reasonable precautions: he is, doubtless, a delightful father to the young rhinoceroses. But I will not promise not to laugh at a rhinoceros … I will not worship an animal. That is, I will not take an animal quite seriously: and I know why.”

Chesterton’s views should be taken in the Controversy of animals versus humans. 

In Canada, you can have a baby butchered in the womb on her due date without legal penalty, but to smash an eagle’s egg will bring down the full force of the law. Animal rights activists, including PETA, regularly compare chicken farms to Auschwitz (I’ve debated them on this subject myself) while insisting that abortion is just fine. And while Trudeau pours billions into funding feticide overseas, the Jane Goodall Act to protect great apes and elephants in captivity in Canada and ban the import of ivory and hunting trophies has passed second reading.

There is nothing wrong with loving animals. There is something profoundly wrong with loving them more than our own children. It is good to closely examine the conditions of creatures in captivity. It is disturbing that we do so while news of babies dying after abortions is faithfully recorded in government statistics and ignored by those tasked with protecting the weak and vulnerable. We kill babies in this country. If we fail to kill them and they make it out of the magical birth canal where human rights are mysteriously conferred, sometimes we just let them die. Hundreds of them. Probably more. But nobody cares. We need a Jane Goodall Act for pre-born children— and legislators willing to expose what is happening, and willing to defend them.

Source:  

Van Maren, Jonathon, 2020. Canada to protect unborn chimps in ‘Jane Goodall Act’ while ignoring unborn humans targeted for abortion. Life Site News 19 November 




Friday, 20 November 2020

Dinosaurs could swim to Africa


 Image courtesy of Daniel Eskridge/Alamy, fair use doctrine.

Joel Kontinen 

The origin of South American monkeys is a big mystery for Darwinist, Now, for the first time, the fossil remains of a duck-billed dinosaur have been found in Africa. The discovery suggests that dinosaurs sometimes swam across wide oceans, and were more capable in water than we thought.

“As best we can tell, dinosaurs swam across ocean barriers,” says Nicholas Longrich at the University of Bath in the UK.

Duck-billed dinosaurs, or hadrosaurs, were common towards the end of the dinosaur era. They were large animals that mostly ate plants. The bones in their snouts were flattened, giving them a duck-like appearance.

Abetter explanation for Dinosaur's swimming skills  is their ability to repopulate the world, after Noahs Flood.


Source:

Marshall Michael. 2020.  Three-metre-long dinosaur may have swum across a wide ocean. New Scientist  16 November

Wednesday, 18 November 2020

Who Killed The TrilobItes?

 


Image courtesy of Shutterstock,


Joel Kontinen

Evolutionists claim that ”trilobites are weird creatures, who looked like  giant swimming potato bugs wearing helmets, and lived on Earth for a whopping 270 million years . These armoured invertebrates, whose species once numbered in the thousands, thrived in the oceans as they scavenged and dug for food, and even managed to survive two mass extinctions.


But about 252 million years ago, trilobites disappeared from the fossil record. What finally wiped out this class of resilient bottom dwellers? “

Then

The trilobite's disappearance coincided with the end-Permian extinction (also known as the Permian-Triassic extinction), the third and the most devastating mass extinction event. Volcanic eruptions in Siberia spewed enormous amounts of lava for around 2 million years, according to Melanie Hopkins, an associate curator of paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City. These fiery eruptions sent trillions of tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, triggering ocean acidification, which in turn made it very difficult for marine animals to survive, according to a 2010 paper published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Up to 95% of marine species succumbed to the end-Permian extinction, also known as the Great Dying, including the trilobites.”

However, I think that  Noah's flood killed off much of the trilobites. It was probable associated with volcanic eruptions that likely also had an effect on animals.

Source:    

Coffey, Donavyn, 2020.  Why did trilobites go extinct? Live Science 15 November .


Monday, 16 November 2020

Evolutionist belief that the first instance of microevolution was in Lucy’s relative

 

Image courtesy of Nikhil Iyengar CC BY-SA 3.0

Joel Kontinen

Evolutionist believe that our ancestors and our close evolutionary cousins that lived at the same time as other human ancestors, including  Homo erectus that some creationists think was human   and evolutionists belief that the first instance of microevolution was in Lucy a form of Australopithecus.,

 Now, evolutionists have found a fossil Paranthropus robustus that shows that males and females were of equal sixe and that P. robustus was a large toothed, small-brained hominins.

 Evolutionists claim that the difference in size was was comparable to  gorillas, orangutans and baboon were males were taught to bigger than females, but the fossil say the difference in size was caused by climate change.

Source:


Geggel, Laura. 2020.  1:st instance of microevolution in early human relative discovered.  Live Science 13 November


Saturday, 14 November 2020

Evolutionists have a chicken and egg puzzle


 Image courtesy of Andrey Nekrasov/Alamy, fair use doctrine,


Joel Kontinen

Evolutionists have a chicken and egg  puzzle:  which evolved first, the Sponge or jelly? 

Though it sounds like a choice between desserts, it turns out that either sponges or comb jellies are the key to understanding the origin of animals, what the first animals were like and when the first brains evolved.

That is because one of them was the first animal group to split from other animals and begin evolving separately – but it has long been unclear which.

A new analysis points the finger at jellies. The study has been praised by scientists on both sides.

But if they were formed in the beginning  as Genesis tell us. the evolutionists are barking up the wrong tree.

 

Source:

Marshall, Michael, 2020,  We may finally have figured out which group of animals evolved first. New Scientist./  6 November, 



Thursday, 12 November 2020

Noah’s Flood May Have Caused An Ancient Lakebed In Greenland


 

Image courtesy of Ray Swi-hymn CC BY-SA 2.0.

 

Joel Kontinen

Scientists have discovered an ancient lakebed buried under more than 1,5 kilometres or a mile of ice that may hold secrets to Greenland's past climate or its ice-free past – that is, the global flood of Noah's flood or 4 500 years ago.

The lake formed  when northwest Greenland  was ice-free, sometime between hundreds of thousands or 

even millions of years ago. Given Greenland's rapid melt today, the lake could reveal something about the Arctic's future as the ice caps shrink. 

 

Paxman and his colleagues discovered the lake using data from instruments that use radar to penetrate beneath the ice surface to measure topography; much of the data came from NASA's Operation IceBridge

The lake basin sits 1.1 miles (1.8 kilometers) below the surface of the ice and stretches over 2,700 square miles (7,100 square km), the size of Rhode Island and Delaware combined. At its deepest point, the lake would have extended about 800 feet (250 meters) down. 

Paxman and his colleagues reported their findings online Oct. 28 online in the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters

 

Source:

Pappas, Stephanie. 2020.  Primeval Greenland lake found buried beneath a mile-thick slab of ice, Live Science  11 November.

Tuesday, 10 November 2020

Yad Vashem Debuts New Exhibition On Kristallnacht Anniversary

 

,

View of the old synagogue in Aachen after its destruction during Kristallnacht, public domain.

Joel Kontinen


The Jews  of Europe were tortured. Their businesses were destroyed, as were their synagogues. Now, 82 years after Kristallnacht, the night of broken glass, Yad Vashem is showcasing a new digital exhibition to elaborate on the events that took place from Nov. 9 to 10, 1938.

The online exhibition entitled, “‘It Came from Within:’ The November Pogrom (Kristallnacht)” features personal stories, archives, a Torah scroll, video testimonies and more. The exhibition is available in English, Hebrew, German and Spanish.

“That night was so aggressive and I want to show that when people think of Kristallnacht, they think it was only synagogues that were burning and glass was broken,” Yona Kobo, the curator at Yad Vashem who created “It Came from Within, said. “They don’t know what happened to the people.”

In this exhibition, Kobo gathered several stories that show what exactly happened to individuals during the pogrom.

This marked the beginning of Adolf Hitler’s fought against the Jews that saw him advancing science to take care of those not fit for life,  and this same Anti-Semitism is still alive today.

Not only did the two-day event have an impact on Jews across Europe, but the days before and after were just as dangerous. There are 10 interactive pictures to click on, each telling a different story from Kristallnacht.

“It’s a very important turning because after that, it wasn’t just anti-Jewish legislation,” Kobo said. “There was a lot of vandalism against the Jews in a very severe way.”

One of the exhibition’s key elements is Lore Mayerfield Stern’s story about her doll. This wasn’t just a doll, but a symbol of how she and her mother survived the pogrom in Marburg, Germany.

“She only managed to take her pajamas from her home,” Kobo said. “The pajama is what the doll is wearing.”

The November Pogrom started with Herschel Grynszpan, a Jewish teenager living in Paris at the time. He went to the German embassy in Paris and shot diplomat Ernst vom Rath. The Nazis used the murder as a way to attack the Jewish communities across Europe. The narrative spread across Europe that all Jews were responsible and needed to be held accountable.

In a two-day span, 30,000 Jewish men were arrested and deported to various concentration camps. Jewish businesses and synagogues were destroyed. Roughly 100 people were murdered by the Nazis in the first major mass incarceration of Jews, and several committed suicide in the days after.

“They took away their dignity,” Kobo said.

In the days and weeks following Kristallnacht, Jews began to flee en masse from Germany. Some went to the Netherlands and France, but ultimately fell victim to the Nazi regime.

Now, in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic, Yad Vashem is seeing an uptick in its website’s traffic. The Holocaust museum believes it is an opportune time to teach about the events that occurred and their timeline. And Yad Vashem is getting creative by using the pandemic as a time to make its collections and exhibitions easily accessible.

We thought nobody would care about it right now, but the numbers are great,” Kobo said. “People want to see something authentic.”

The biggest lesson of all, though, from the exhibition is to never give up hope.

“After such a terrible ordeal, you can still get up and continue,” Kobo said. “We have stories [of people] who managed to leave and build a new life.”

For Kristallnacht’s anniversary this year, March of the Living launched #lettherebelight, a social media campaign to spread awareness about the night of terror. They are also inviting people across the globe to keep their lights on to show solidarity with the Jewish community in memory of those were killed in the Holocaust.

Source:

Wolkin, Joseph, 2020. Yad Vashem debuts new exhibition on Kristallnacht anniversary.  World Israel News.  8 November. 

Sunday, 8 November 2020

Newly Discovered Exoplanet Is Hot And Weird

 


Image courtesy of Engine House VFX, At-Bristol Science Centre, University of Exeter.


Joel Kontinen

Scientists think they have identified a lava world so dramatic that it might boast a thin regional atmosphere of vaporized rock where it is closest to its star.

It is not the first exoplanet to behave in this way.

That exoplanet is called K2-141b and was originally discovered in 2017. The world is about half again as big as Earth but orbits so close to its star, which is one class smaller than our own, that it completes several loops each Earth-day with the same surface permanently facing the star. Now, scientists predict those factors mean that two-thirds of the surface of K2-141b is permanently sunlit — so much so that not only is part of the world covered in a lava ocean, but some of that rock may even evaporate away into the atmosphere.


The research is described in a paper published Nov. 3 in the journal the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

Some exoplanets are weird. Our planet was designed for us.

Source:

Bartels, Meghan. 2020. This bizarre planet could have supersonic winds in an atmosphere of vaporized rock, Live Science  6 November.