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Children
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Introductory
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Intermediate
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Technical
Technical
Catastrophes in Earth History
Steven A. Austin
Paperback / $17.00 / 318 pages / black & white photos
Modern and ancient catastrophic processes and their amazing geologic products are described from the scientific literature. These accounts illustrate the bankruptcy of uniformitarianism and superiority of catastrophism.
Evolution Under the Microscope
The striking image on the cover of this book is a crystal of DNA. What more effective illustration could one imagine for a book which deals with the significance of biochemistry for our understanding of biology? Read the rest of this entry »
Evolution: Under the Microscope
David Swift
Paperback / $25.50 / 423 pages
A Scientific Critique of the Theory of Evolution. Skeptical in outlook, the author never meant to challenge evolution, yet he could not help reflecting on the implications of molecular biology. The theme is that large biological molecules are astonishingly improbable. Indeed the criterion for folding of a protein molecule is, by itself, he says, enough to defeat any attempt at developing a protein through random processes. Based on such conclusions, the author also discusses how natural selection operates, origin of life speculations, endosymbiosis theory, origin of sex, cladistics, homology and the fossil record. The writing style is clear and interesting. Ideal for university students and scientifically lite
Starlight and Time
Russell Humphreys
Paperback / $9.00 / 138 pages
The Bible teaches that the universe is just thousands of years old, and yet we can see stars that appear to be billions of light years away. In this book, the author explains this in terms of quantum theory. The book includes two technical papers presented at the Third International Conference on Creationism.







