Tag: genome
RNA World: Repeated Downfalls, Repeated Resurrections
Alexander Oparin’s 1924 prediction that origin-of-life research would be solved “very, very soon” hasn’t quite turned out right.
“Living Fossil”? Maybe. Tuatara Genome Is Now Sequenced and Published
The tuatara genome is 5GB, making it enormous relative to other vertebrates — and full of surprises.
Behe Vindicated Again: Sherpas Climb Everest Easier, Because Darwin Devolves
How can Tibetans survive high altitudes that leave lowlanders gasping? The answer is found in broken genes.
New Papers Explore the Utility of Active Information
William Dembski and Robert J. Marks developed the concept of active information to measure the extent to which a search function appears pre-programmed to find some target.
Inference Article Demonstrates Implausibility of Natural Processes for Explaining the Origin of Life
The piece is highly technical and mathematical, but the basic argument can be quickly summarized with only a marginal loss of technical accuracy.