pp. 1–10 •
Dr. Danny R. Faulkner
Geoffrey and Margaret Burbidge played a key role in slowing the acceptance of dark matter. Therein lies a cautionary tale for scientists.
pp. 11–36 •
Dr. Terry Mortenson
Grudem is making the same biblical and theological errors that theistic evolutionists make. To be biblically consistent, he must abandon his old-earth position.
pp. 37–45 •
Dr. Jerry Bergman
An unbridgeable gap exists between the simple urinary system used in invertebrates and the far more complex kidney system used in all vertebrates.
pp. 45–61 •
Simon Turpin
A number of evangelical archaeologists and biblical scholars have concluded that the best candidate to date for biblical Sodom is to be found north-east of the Dead Sea at Tall el-Hammam.
pp. 61–66 •
Dr. Jerry Bergman
The history of the mutation theory as the foundation of the source of new genetic information is reviewed.
pp. 67–80 •
Kenneth C. Griffith
, et. al.
This paper examines the chronology of the Neo-Babylonian and Achaemenid Empires and weighs Martin Anstey’s claim that 82 years of history was fabricated.
pp. 81–123 •
Ken P Coulson
Many creationists are actively engaged in finding the Flood/post-Flood boundary, but most creationists consider the Precambrian-Cambrian contact more attractive.
pp. 125–157 •
Matt Dawson
Several archaeological finds are indirect evidences which build a cumulative case supporting the biblical account of Jesus’s resurrection.
pp. 159–254 •
Dr. Andrew A. Snelling
The petrology of the Tapeats Sandstone is consistent with the global Genesis flood.
pp. 255–259 •
Dr. Jerry Bergman
The spleen is now acknowledged to be a critical organ serving at least six different important functions.
pp. 261–269 •
Colin R. Reeves
The use of Baraminic Distance Correlation is based on a shaky understanding of statistical principles, and that their use ought to be abandoned.
pp. 271–282 •
Colin R. Reeves
Part 2 of this research, reported herein, presents a formal reanalysis of the turtle data using some well-known clustering techniques.
pp. 283–302 •
Todd Charles Wood
Pearson baraminic distance correlation remains a useful heuristic for clustering taxa and should not be rejected merely on the basis of Reeves’s critique.
pp. 303–415 •
Dr. Andrew A. Snelling
Investigation of the nature of the folding of the Cambrian Tonto Group strata in Grand Canyon necessitates first investigating the petrology of those strata.
pp. 417–426 •
Dr. Danny R. Faulkner
Here I review some of the naturalistic theories of how stars form. I discuss many topics never described in the creation literature before.
pp. 427–430 •
Dr. Jerry Bergman
All vertebrate pancreases have an endocrine function producing insulin, glucagon, and somatostatin hormones, as well as exocrine functions producing digestive enzymes.
pp. 431–434 •
Dr. Jerry Bergman
Critics have attempted to negate the effect of a common quote that evolution is accepted mainly because the only alternative, special creation, is unacceptable.
pp. 435–439 •
Dr. Jerry Bergman
An enormous unbridgeable gap exists between invertebrates, who do not have livers, and vertebrates, who cannot live without them.
pp. 451–462 •
P. Sinclair
, et. al.
Creationist disagreement over the status of hominin fossils is unlikely to be resolved here, but Reeves’s recommendations bring alternative tools to baraminology that have not been applied.
pp. 463–472 •
Dr. Jerry Bergman
Friedrich Engels was in some ways as important as Marx in helping to establish the revolution called Marxism (Communism) that has changed the world.
pp. 475–480 •
Dr. Jerry Bergman
The history of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study is a salient example of the negative fruits of Darwinian racism.
pp. 481–494 •
Herman Dorland
If the Radioisotope Age (Dolerite) > Radioisotope Age (intruded succession) then there is a violation of the relative age inequality.
pp. 495–503 •
Dr. Jerry Bergman
The evidence is overwhelming and widely recognized by evolutionists that evolution by small steps cannot bridge the transition from asexual to sexual reproduction.