Science Is Constantly Evolving

Discover the latest in climate change and evolution education news.

With the release, and huge success, of Jurassic World, dinosaurs are certainly on everyone’s mind this summer. Being a lover of the original Jurassic Park, but none too impressed by the series that followed, it’s been hard for me to go see the newest edition. But that…
In part 1, I described how I responded to an interesting question about the extinction of the Neanderthals. My correspondent was perplexed. Although he could see how competition, disease, interbreeding, and hunting might have reduced the population of the Neanderthals appreciably, he didn’t see…
Climate change education is suddenly under discussion in the United States Senate, the National Journal (July 9, 2015) reports, with the introduction of dueling amendments to a bill to reauthorize the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. A proposed amendment (SA 2144) from…
Lindsay Miller was an intern in spring 2014 at NCSE, where she worked with Minda Berbeco on the Understanding Global Change project. She is a student at Colorado College. Last spring I had the pleasure of working on the Understanding Global Change (UGC) project as an intern for NCSE…
This month’s evolution resource comes from a marvelous site full of great stuff and with deep ties to NCSE: the Evolution and the Nature of Science Institutes (ENSI) web site. From the “About” page: In February 1987, the [ENSI] “founders” (and faculty-to-be) met for the first time at the Field…
I return at last to “And Thereby Hangs a Tail,” a sketch based on the Scopes trial that appeared in The Garrick Gaieties, a revue that originally ran in 1925. (There were sequels of the same name in 1926 and in 1930.) The lyrics in the sketch are by Lorenz Hart (1895–1943), while the…
One of the joys of working at NCSE is the chance to explore and explain cool science to interested members of the public. Such a chance happened recently when I got a note asking why the Neanderthals went extinct. I’m not an anthropologist, and haven’t spent much time following the…
In part 1, I described how Kanawha County, West Virginia, almost anticipated Dover, Pennsylvania, in provoking the first legal case over the constitutionality of teaching “intelligent design” in the public schools. After a proposed equal-time-for-creation-science policy was unsuccessful in 1999…
  Let’s take another look at last week’s fossil, this time with its original specimen card.     I may be geeking out a little, but check out that card! This specimen was collected more than a hundred years ago, and there are plenty of details on this card that I think are…