Anatomy and physiology

Content

All selected
Tailbone

Tailbone

The coccyx (tailbone) performs several functions and is not useless or vestigial as the New York museum claims.
Article
27 Apr, 2017
From a frog to a frog!

From a frog to a frog!

Explaining how a tadpole becomes a frog.
Article
26 Apr, 2017
Giant hoax

Giant hoax

Pictures of giant skeletons are faked and physiologically impossible.
Article
27 Mar, 2017
Celebrating gender confusion

Celebrating gender confusion

How should Christians react when the media glorifies what Scripture condemns in celebrating gender denial?
Article
17 Jan, 2017
The miracle of tears

The miracle of tears

Why you shouldn\’t hold back those tears.
Article
04 May, 2016
The human nose knows better than we thought

The human nose knows better than we thought

The human nose can identify many more aromas than had been previously thought.
Article
21 Mar, 2016
The human body—God’s masterpiece

The human body—God’s masterpiece

The human body reveals an amazing design; the human brain is the most complex and highly ordered arrangement of matter in the universe.
Article
12 Jan, 2011
Opossums

Opossums

The existence of opossum marsupials in America fits with biblical creation and dispersal after the Flood and their biology speaks of design.
Article
29 Nov, 2010
The design of tears: an example of irreducible complexity

The design of tears: an example of irreducible complexity

Article
25 Oct, 2007
Dawkins' eye revisited

Dawkins' eye revisited

Article
18 Oct, 2007
Appendix: a bacterial ‘safe house’

Appendix: a bacterial ‘safe house’

New research suggests function for appendix in maintaining good digestive bacteria populations.
Article
17 Oct, 2007
Is the human male nipple vestigial?

Is the human male nipple vestigial?

Human male nipples are not vestigial. Supernumerary nipples (extra nipples) are not atavisms.
Article
23 Aug, 2007
Bone building: perfect protein (Osteocalcin)

Bone building: perfect protein (Osteocalcin)

For bones to deposit the hard calcium mineral in the right place, they need the protein osteocalcin. Recent discovery of its crystal structure shows that it binds calcium in exactly the right geometry for proper crystal growth.
Article
16 Nov, 2006