Oysters and Opportunities

Under ideal circumstances, we can do a lot of good. But when circumstances handicap or restrict our potential—in ways we cannot circumvent—we just do the best that we can.

That principle is true for humans as well as in the water-filtering services of the humble bivalves we call oysters—according to recent research involving the University of Maryland.1,2


Desperate Dinosaurs Cannibalized During Global Flood

Scientists recently discovered evidence that large theropods were possibly guilty of cannibalism.1


Dumbo Octopus, God's Wonder in the Deepest Deep

About 3,000 years ago, the Bible taught that the “wonders in the deep” are the “works of the Lord.”1 Now that truth has been illustrated with even greater depth by the documented sighting of a super-deep-sea octopus—about 21,000 feet deep at the ocean’s bottom, to be specific.2,3


The Rocket Bug: Lone Insect of the Open Ocean

Various water-striding insects use small body sizes, long legs, and fine hairs on their feet to skate on the surfaces of ponds and streams. But life on the open ocean presents tougher challenges than landlocked waterways. Waves, fishes, salt, and birds should spell disaster for such small striders.


Cuckoo Completes Mammoth 7,500-Mile Migration

One particular common cuckoo will soon complete a mammoth migration through both Africa and Asia—a migration that is anything but common.

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