Monday Minute: Flood Geology of the “Mountains of Ararat”
Part and parcel to the ‘Flood Geology’ paradigm is the proposal that Noah’s Ark ran aground in the high mountains of Turkey near the end of a recent global flood—an inference made from […]
Part and parcel to the ‘Flood Geology’ paradigm is the proposal that Noah’s Ark ran aground in the high mountains of Turkey near the end of a recent global flood—an inference made from […]
We all know the tale of the dinosaurs’ demise: some 65 million years ago, a large asteroid impacted the Earth near the modern Yucatan peninsula. The cataclysmic event resulted in […]
A nation divided In the decade leading up to the controversial loss to George W. Bush for President, I lived in a community of friends, classmates, and neighbors who were vehemently critical of Al Gore […]
The American southwest is known for being hot and dry, and for the millions of residents flocking to desert metropolises like Phoenix and Las Vegas, this relatively stable, snow-free climate […]
I have no intention of turning this blog into a discussion on climate change, but in light of AiG’s recent response to the new campaign goals of the NCSE, several […]
A recent article from ScienceInsider asks, “Is climate change education the new evolution, threatened in U.S. school districts and state education standards by well-organized interest groups?” The National Center for Science Education […]
Well, it has been a quiet September on this blog, but not for me personally! With the beginning of the Fall semester, my dissertation-related tasks were heavily compounded, leaving little […]