Similar Articles |
|
Geotimes December 2005 |
Highlights 2005 -- Paleontology The "Great Dying" debate... Tracking human migration... More "hobbits" in Indonesia... T. rex bones break ground... An evolving debate... |
Salon.com January 14, 2002 John Glassie |
E.O. Wilson The great scientist and conservationist explains the terrorism we insist on overlooking. And space colonies won't help, either... |
Chemistry World September 2006 Mark Peplow |
Editorial: Making a Monkey Out of Evolution If a scientific concept as well supported as evolution can be widely regarded as false, what hope for the greenhouse effect, radiocarbon dating, or the second law of thermodynamics? Chemists have as much responsibility as other scientists to uphold the value of hard evidence. |
Pharmaceutical Executive September 1, 2005 Humphrey Taylor |
Back Page: Evolution? It's Not Right! The Religious Right is likely to influence the future of medicine, healthcare, and medical research. |
Bio-IT World February 11, 2005 Kevin Davies |
Bioinformatics on the Brain Adaptive selection: accelerated mutation rate produced humans' large brain. |
Scientific American December 2008 John Rennie |
Dynamic Darwinism: Evolution Theory Thrives Today The naturalist would approve of how evolutionary science continues to improve |
Scientific American July 2009 Charles Q. Choi |
Being More Infantile May Have Led to Bigger Brains Genetic evidence suggests that juvenile traits helped separate chimps from us |
Smithsonian April 2007 Jen Phillips |
Species Explosion What happens when you mix evolution with climate change? |
CIO December 15, 2003 Michael Fitzgerald |
Smart Systems - 2010 The process of evolution provides models for dealing with the complexity of advanced IT systems. You could think of studying the development of species over time -- or building models that replicate natural selection -- as a giant Google search for the species that thrives rather than falters. |
Geotimes September 2006 |
Geomedia Lost's Magnetic Plot... Book Review: Life As We Do Not Know It by Peter Ward... |
Wired January 18, 2008 Thomas Hayden |
Why Things Suck: Science Science makes us look like bit players in the Big Story of the universe, and it exposes some key limitations of the human brain. |
Reason Aug/Sep 2000 |
Letters: Earth Day in the Balance I was delighted to read Ronald Bailey's "Earth Day: Then and Now"... I was puzzled by Ronald Bailey's "Earth Day: Then and Now"... |