First Land Bug Buried in the Flood

The Scottish island of Kerrera has produced the earliest known bug in the fossil record, a millipede.1 It was found in Silurian System rocks recently claimed by secular scientists to be 425 million years old.1 Unexplainably, their millipede fossil just seemed to show up, fully-formed as a completely functioning “creeping thing.”


’Grand Canyon’ of Greenland Formed by Genesis Flood

A massive canyon rivalling Grand Canyon has been discovered beneath the ice on Greenland, and uniformitarian scientists are explaining it as a consequence of flooding.1 We couldn’t agree more.


Many Martian Volcanoes May Be Mudflows

Tens of thousands of volcano-looking features exist across the northern lowlands and other areas across Mars.1 In the past, these volcanoes were thought to be caused by lava flows from the planet’s interior. However, a new study published in the journal Nature Geoscience has postulated that many of these “volcanoes” may have actually flowed mud, not lava.1


New Australian Dinosaur Surprises Evolutionists

A new study published in the journal Gondwana Research has identified a rather out-of-place bone from a theropod dinosaur called an elaphrosaur that apparently didn’t eat meat.1 In fact, it was toothless.


World's Largest Volcano Found Hiding Under the Ocean

A new study published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters has determined that Puhahonu volcano is the world’s largest by volume and the hottest.1 Found almost 700 miles northwest of Hawai’i, Puhahonu volcano is almost completely submerged beneath the Pacific Ocean.2 Only two small, rocky remnants stick up to about 170 feet above the surface, exposing only six a

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