Journal of Creation archive > Volume 34 Issue 1
Journal of Creation
Volume 34, Issue 1
Published April 2020
127 pages
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Contents:
Page |
Title |
3–4 | Complex water gap features—Krichauff Range, Northern Territory, Australia Perspective by Ron Neller |
5–7 | The ‘poor tooth design’ claim refuted Perspective by Jerry Bergman |
8–9 | What is the meaning of an ammonite found in amber? Perspective by Michael J. Oard |
10 | Plants feeding on quartzite support rapid plant growth after the Flood Perspective by Michael J. Oard |
11–12 | The upper limits of survivability of bone material Perspective by Paul Price |
13–14 | The origin of flightless birds Perspective by Michael J. Oard |
15–16 | Salt management and evolution Perspective by Philip P. Bell |
16–18 | What’s the point of the pyramids? Perspective by Gavin Cox |
19–20 | A critique of scientism spoiled A review of Can science explain everything? (John C. Lennox) Book Review by Lucien Tuinstra |
21–23 | New textbook teaches non-Christian religion of theistic evolutionism A review of Understanding Scientific Theories of Origins: Cosmology, geology, and biology in Christian perspective (Robert C. Bishop, Larry L. Funck, Raymond J. Lewis, Stephen O. Mosher, and John H. Walton) Book Review by Lita Sanders |
24–29 | Ancient context to enduring doubt A review of Old Testament Theology for Christians: From ancient context to enduring belief (John H. Walton) Book Review by Murray R. Adamthwaite |
30–32 | The conversation that never happened A review of Richard Dawkins, C.S. Lewis and the Meaning of Life (Alister McGrath) Book Review by Thomas Fretwell |
32–35 | Academia and the press as the bad guys A review of Spectacle: The astonishing life of Ota Benga (Pamela Newkirk) Book Review by Jerry Bergman |
36–40 | Social animals A review of Blueprint: The evolutionary origins of a good society (Nicholas A. Christakis) Book Review by Daniel Davidson |
40–45 | Scientism and secularism … and Scripture? A review of Secularism and Scientism: Learning to respond to a dangerous ideology (J.P. Moreland) Book Review by Shaun Doyle |
46–52 | Reading Genesis badly A review of Reading Genesis Well: Navigating history, poetry, science, and truth in Genesis 1–11 (C. John Collins) Book Review by Andrew Kulikovsky |
53–54 | Thermal history of the Fenton Hill site Letter from Gary H. Loechelt. Reply: Russell Humphreys |
54 | Flood—post Flood boundary Letter from Arthur Manning |
55–62 | The Great Oxidation Event or The Great Phytogenic Event Paper by Greg N. Bender |
63–70 | The spiritual roots of modern feminism Paper by Augusto Zimmermann |
71–78 | Rapid growth of caves and speleothems: part 1—the excavation of the cave Paper by Michael J. Oard |
79–85 | Out of Babel—not Africa: genetic evidence for a biblical model of human origins Paper by Jeff Tomkins |
86–95 | A new baraminology method based on Whole Genome K-mer Signature analysis and its application to insect classification Paper by Matthew Cserhati |
96–101 | Do lizards and snakes form separate apobaramins? Paper by Matthew Cserhati |
102–109 | Psalm 104:6–9 likely refers to Noah’s Flood Viewpoint by William Barrick, Michael J. Oard and Paul Price |
110–114 | What’s so great about Tiktaalik? Viewpoint by John Curtis |
115–122 | Phrenology—a myth behind Darwinism Essay by Jerry Bergman |
123–127 | The chasm between the fish non-pelvis and the tetrapod pelvis Essay by Jerry Bergman |
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