Friday, 30 June 2023

Researchers see intelstellar fragments in the ocean, just north of Papua New Guinea

Image courtesy of Avi Loeb.


Joel Kontinen 


An expedition to hunt for fragments of a possible interstellar meteor has found 40 tiny spherules on the sea floor However, some researchers claim that whether the assumption that they are interstellar is controversial. ,

An expedition to hunt for fragments of a supposed interstellar meteor has found 40 tiny sperules of an interstellar meteor that supposetly fell north of Papua New Guinea in 2014.  

One of the scientist who told this was Avi Loeb, who has made the oamuamua a sensation.  

Is   ‘Oumuamua space rock or alien technologySome astronomers think that is a space rock whilst others are not sure of its origin. 

 Many evolutionists think that it is alien technology, as they suppose that all live was formed by Darwinian ways. ,The  ones who believe in a Genesis account of creation think that all live was formed by God. 

Source: 

Crane,  Leah, 2023. interstellar meteor fragments may have been found in the Pacific Ocean, New Scientist 27 June


Wednesday, 28 June 2023

El Niño brings rain for Christmas


 Image courtesy of: Gabriel Prieto/Huanchaco Archaeological Project.

Joel Kontinen


El Niño is not a recent development, at least in Latin America ,New research posits an ancient desert wall in northern Peru was built to protect precious farmlands and canals from the ravages of El nino floods

“These phases are now known as  El Niño — Spanish for "The Boy," a reference to the child Jesus — because they bring heavy rain to the region around Christmastime every few years. “

Earth Day is a misnomer. 

It used to be known as Earth Day. The United Nations has gone a step further and re-named it The International Mother Earth Day.

The 
green ideology behind this move could hardly have been more obvious.

Some would even say that
 the mushroom is our brother.

Some others want to give 
apes and rivers the same rights we have.

The post-Christian world wants its share of holy days, such as 
Darwin Day and Earth Day.

Source; 

 Metcalfe,  Tom, 2023.  1,000-year-old wall in Peru was built to protect against El Niño floods, research suggests Live Science 27 June. 

 

Monday, 26 June 2023

Muskoxen are thriving in spite of climate change


 Image courtesy of Quartl,  CC BY-SA 3.0.

Joel Kontinen

 

Some evolutionists suppose that climate change, with its warming temperature and loss of sea ice can bring about   that is herbivore diversity reduces climate effects, for instance muskoxen ,are thriving in spite of climate change, 


Source:

: Bianca Lopez, 2023, Herbivore diversity reduces climate effect, Science,  23 June. , 

Saturday, 24 June 2023

Zone of avoidance in the cenre of the universe


 Image courtesy of Shutterstock/structuresxx.  

Joel Kontinen 

Some stars are missing from the centre of the universe. We do not know what has happened there.

.” Stars at any given distance from the supermassive black hole at the galactic centre, called Sagittarius A, should have a random distribution of shapes to their orbits, but one group of stars is mysteriously missing from that distreeeibution.”

Well, God who made the heavens knows what is happening there.   

 Source: 

Crane,  Leah, 2023.  Centre of our galaxy has a 'zone of avoidance' and we don't know why. , New Scientist 22 June. 


Thursday, 22 June 2023

Evolutionists posit grave danger in dating methods


 Image courtesy of Uwe Dederin, CC BY-SA 3.0.

JoJoel Kontinen

 Joel Kontinen

Millions of years is a touchy topic. Scientist evaluated the Ontong Java Plateau was formed during the Cretaceous Period.   

Evolution believing scientist think that it erupted 128 to 120 million years ago. 

However, Davidson et al. measured high-precision 40Ar/39Ar ages that date it to a later time: 117 to 108 million years ago.

So, evolutionists have a problem with millions of years. 

Source: 

Smith,  H. Jesse, 2023, Later lava. Science. 16. June. 2023

el sC

C BY-SA 3.0)

Tuesday, 20 June 2023

Strange spiny beetle found in Japan


 

Image courtesy of OIST. 

Joel Kontinen

Some animals are not cute. For instance, science has discovered a beetle that is called Acicnemis ryukyuana ,

This specimen has distinct “yellow band on its shoulders, long hair-like scales all over its body and leg, ”

It seems that God who made this beetle could not hide his laughter when he made it,


Source; 

Ly , Chen. 2023, Strange, spiny beetle discovered in Japan, New Scientist 16 June. 

Saturday, 17 June 2023

Evolutionists claim that old plants did not have a Fibonnacci sequence

 


Image: courtesy of  Matt Humpage, Northern Rogue Studios, 

Joel Kontinen 

It seems that modern plants have a Fibonacci sequence in their organs and spires, However, researchers  found that some old plants did not have a Fibonacci-style pattering.

 They also suggest that lycophyte leaves originated from modified reproductive structures rather than evolving de novo, as the Darwinian style claims.

Source: 

Seale, Maddy, 2023. 

Three-dimensional reconstruction of a fossil lycopod with a spiral morphology that differs from most modern plants Science 16 June.

Friday, 16 June 2023

The fastest moving star

image courtesy of NASA/JPL-Caltech, 
 Joel Kontinen 

Two white dwarfs rocketing through space are the fastest free-moving stars that we know about and evolutionist think that they could explain how some supernovae form.

“Type Ia supernovae are so reliably bright that astronomers use them as measuring sticks for assessing how far away distant stars and galaxies are. These supernovae tend to occur when a white dwarf siphons off matter from a neighbouring star,”

But astronomy is tainted with its millions of fyearss  and any one who   thinks differently will be ostracized.   


Source:;  

Wilkins, Alex. 2023. Fastest star in the galaxy clocked at 2285 kilometres per second New Scientist 14 June

Wednesday, 14 June 2023

Why have we not see UFOS?

 


Image courtesy of IAC/UAE/NASA/ESA,

Joel  Kontinen 

Evolutionists propose that aliens are  real, That is why they try to search for their meaning for Instance on Mars and other planets.

Now, when it comes to aliencivilisations, they suppose that UFOS are being send From them, But aliens do not  live on planets we could not see,.

NASA has formed a task force  on unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAPs , "So far, the UAP group hasn’t proved me wrong. Out of more than 800 reports of UAPs, almost all are traceable back to mundane sources – commercial aircraft, balloons, even radiation from microwave ovens. Less than 5 per cent of them remained anomalous after investigation." 

So we nmiht noe see UFOS  in yhe near future

Source:

 Crane , Leah, 2023.  Aliens visiting Earth?| New ScientistScientist 9 June

Monday, 12 June 2023

Evolutionists think that a supernova could harbour life,


 

Image courtesy of Paul Macklin.

Joel Kontinen.

Astronomers think that a supernova SN 2023ixf might be an opportunity for concocting other civilisations

 They are looking toward a recently  discover supernova that emits signals, in the hope that this would be other civilisation trying to contact us.

“Last month, a supernova dubbed SN 2023ixf was found in the nearby Pinwheel galaxy 21 million light years away, the closest stellar explosion detected from Earth in a decade,”,

However, the entire galaxy was formed by God in the beginnng


Source: 

 O’Callaghan,  Jonathan. 2023,  Astronomers are using a new supernova to search for alien signals,  New Scientist9 June. ,



Saturday, 10 June 2023

Ancient men could hurt temselves by making stone tools

 


Image courtesy of Kent State University/American Antiquity/Michelle Bebber.

Joel Kontinen

Some modern people can cut themselves badly when making stone tools, This his poses the problem – how could ancient stone worker could easily have a death sentebnce for anyone who did this kind of stuff before modern medicine and antibiotic, that is doctors had a  chance  nge to look at them. 

Even today stone workers hurt themselves when they try tpo make stone tools.,   

Source: 

Hsu , Jeremy. 2023, Ancient humans may have risked their lives making stone tools, New Scientist  2 June,

Wednesday, 7 June 2023

Why does evolution always produce crabs?

 



Image courtesy of Dr. Peter K. L. Ng;,CC-BY 4.0, 

.

Joel Kontinen

Crabby bodies have evolved at least five different times. So why does this processes known as carcinization, keep on happening?

According to Darwinian evolution, carcinization is an example of a phenomenon called convergent evolution, which is when different groups independently evolve the same traits,

For instance, a crab like body has evolved at least five times.

This falsifies Darwin’s tree of life. Only close relatives should look alike.


But very often 
genetically distant species look alikeregardless of how long ago they parted ways (in the Darwinian scenario, that is.,

Source: 

Hamers,  Laurel, 2023,Why do animals keep evolving into crabs? Live Science.  


Tuesday, 6 June 2023

Evolutionist think that climate change will bring tsunamis

  

Image  courtesy of Shutterstock.
Joel Kontinen 

Accordng to evolution, climate change could unleash gigantic tsunamis mostly by triggering massive landslides in the Antartica. 

Previous studies have shown that during previous periods of global warming, that is t3 to 15 million years ago, — loose sediment layers formed and slipped to send massive tsunami waves racing to the shores of South America, New Zealand and Southeast Asia during jhe mid-Pliocene warm period.

This time, the effeck would be much as large, the scientist warmed,

Source;  

Turner,  Ben, 2023.  Climate change could trigger gigantic deadly tsunamis from Antarctica, new study warns Live Science 22 May. 

Sunday, 4 June 2023

Giant species found in Australia

 




Image courtesy of van Zoelen et al. 2023/Flinders University

Joel Kontinen

Scientist in Australia have found a new species called Ambulator keanei. 

According to evolution, it had a body plan similarto a bear or rhinoceros, it probably weighted about 250 kilograms or 550 pounds, and it was around 1 meter tall or 3.3 feet at the shoulder. It was though to be 3.5 million years old


The research was published on May 31 in the journal Royal Society Open Science.

Source:  Baker,  Harry, 2923.  Quarter-ton marsupial that ambled across Australia 3.5 million years ago was 'unlike anything alive today' Live Science  1 June.