What did Jesus do to five barley loaves and two small fishes that would produce enough food to feed five thousand men? He used the first law of thermodynamics.
Melting Arctic ice will have catastrophic effects on the world, experts say. Here’s how.
The Arctic is the "frontline" for climate change, scientists said. ByJulia JacoboDecember 24, 2021, 6:28 AM• 12 min readOriginal article If there is any doubt about climate change, look no further than the coldest regions of the planet for proof that the planet is warming at unprecedented rates, experts say. The Arctic, is heating up …
Cosmology’s biggest conundrum is official, and no one knows how the Universe has expanded
After more than two decades of precision measurements, we've now reached the "gold standard" for how the pieces don't fit.
Does the expansion of the Universe break the speed of light?
Just 13.8 billion years after the hot Big Bang, we can see 46.1 billion light-years away in all directions. Doesn't that violate…something?
Huge hole discovered in Arctic’s ‘last ice’
A huge hole opened in the Arctic's oldest, thickest ice in May 2020, a new study revealed. Scientists previously thought that this area of ice was the Arctic's most stable, but the giant rift signals that the ancient ice is vulnerable to melt.
Ice Melt at The Poles Is Now Causing Hidden Changes to Earth’s Crust on a Huge Scale
As the polar ice sheets melt, the process is not just raising sea levels – it's also warping the underlying surface of Earth, a new study reveals, and some of the effects can be seen across thousands of miles.
Antarctica’s ‘Doomsday Glacier’ is fighting an invisible battle against the inner Earth, new study finds
Underground heat is cooking the Thwaites Glacier from below, and could push it closer to collapse.
The Potter’s Hand
We have to deduce a physical process by which a solid ball of stratified sediment, the Earth at the end of the second day, is formed into a hollow sphere with a hydrological system by the end of the third day.
Newton’s Firmament
"And therefore as it is possible, that in the remote regions of the fixed stars, or perhaps far beyond them, there may be some body absolutely at rest; but impossible to know..." Sir Isaac Newton speculating about the firmament.
The Banded Iron Formations
We have a way to account for physical evidence, the banded iron formations and enigmatic Precambrian fossils, in a way that's strikingly similar to the narrative induced by mainstream science (SciPop).
