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Posts Tagged ‘Evolution’

Stereo Nozzles

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 300 Comments › )
Filed under Evolution, Humor, Open thread at August 2nd, 2010 - 11:00 pm

No photoshop here. These pups actually have stereo nozzles.

There is a rare breed of dog named the Double-Nosed Andean Tiger Hound, found in Bolivia, and no, I’m not making this up. Someone named “Explorer Colonel John Blashford-Snell” found them, and I’m not making that up either.

Here’s Mama:

Here’s Sonny.

Apparently the Double-Nosed Andean Tiger Hound smells twice as good as most dogs and is capable of 3-dimensional scent detection. But don’t take one for a ride. The dog gets confused and frustrated trying to put its head out of both car windows at the same time.

Okay, I made that last part up, and I smell an Overnight Open Thread.

[Previously posted here.]

Tastes Like Chicken

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 367 Comments › )
Filed under Evolution, Humor, Open thread at July 13th, 2010 - 11:00 pm

[via]

Clever marketing campaign is explained in this video with an appropriate soundtrack.  I’m going to run right out and pick up some Bosch plastic wrap right after we grill up a big juicy Overnight Open Thread.

Palaeontology is Hard!

by tqcincinnatus ( 397 Comments › )
Filed under Evolution, Science at October 12th, 2009 - 3:13 pm

Especially for palaeontologists, it would seem,

Many dinosaurs may be facing a new kind of extinction—a controversial theory suggests as many as a third of all known dinosaur species never existed in the first place.

That’s because young dinosaurs didn’t look like Mini-Me versions of their parents, according to new analyses by paleontologists Mark Goodwin, University of California, Berkeley, and Jack Horner, of Montana State University.

Instead, like birds and some other living animals, the juveniles went through dramatic physical changes during adulthood.

This means many fossils of young dinosaurs, including T. rex relatives, have been misidentified as unique species, the researchers argue.

How T. Rex Became a Terror

The lean and graceful Nanotyrannus is one strong example. Thought to be a smaller relative of T. rex, the supposed species is now considered by many experts to be based on a misidentified fossil of a juvenile T. rex.

The purported Nanotyrannus fossils have the look of a teenage T. rex, Horner said in the new documentary. That’s because T. rex‘s skull changed dramatically as it grew, he said.

The skull morphed from an elongated shape to the more familiar, short snout and jaw, which could take in large quantities of food.

But the smoking gun, Horner said, was the discovery of a dinosaur between the size of an adult T. rex and Nanotyrannus.

As I’ve said before on numerous occasions, palaeontology isn’t necessarily an exact science.   Just ask Java Man.

It’ll be interesting to see how evolutionists spin this.  The one science that they really, truly were pinning their hopes on to save evolution’s bacon – and it turns out the primary “scientists” involved can’t even distinguish juvenile and adult dinosaurs of the same species.  This – along with the long procession of “proto-human hominid ancestors” whose skeletons are reconstructed based on the testimony of a couple of jawbones, or wristbones from an extinct species of peccary – calls into question the competence of the whole structure of the palaeontological pseudoscience.  It really does.  We all the time hear about “missing links” and whatnot that are discovered, only to later turn out to be deformed members of already-known species, and so forth.  That’s what happens when the obsession to validate a philosophical presupposition takes the place of careful, empirical study.

I find it ironic that the discovery of a missing link is what calls the science of missing links into question. 

How Frankencell becomes Boobzilla in diaper science 101 for evolutionists ~ By Do-While Jones.

by bar ( 238 Comments › )
Filed under Evolution, Humor, Open thread, Science at October 9th, 2009 - 8:01 am

If you don’t find the video amusing, you need to read this first to understand the underlying issues.

Reactions to our video will vary.  Innocently ignorant evolutionists will be confused because they won’t get too many of the jokes. Hopefully, it will get them to thinking.  Intimidated intellectual evolutionists will be greatly angered by our video because they will get the jokes, and will realize that they expose the absurdity of their claims. But since their belief in evolution is based on fear rather than reason, our video won’t have much affect on them.  Creationists will get all the jokes, will laugh, and love the video.


This website ScienceAgainstEvolution is very informative.  Perhaps it is the engineer in me that finds it so appealing?