Not exact matches
Michael Behe (in The Edge of Evolution) points out that there is abundant evidence for «microevolution» (
smaller population change), but there is a boundary at
which the evidence for microevolution stops and evidence for macroevolution either doesn't exist, or any
clues that do exist are beset with problems so serious that explanatory attempts boil down to «just - so - stories.»
The first
clue is this photo,
which reveals a
small sampling of the books I've been using for research.
Now, a new generation of researchers is attacking the problem, and a
small but growing group is taking its cue from evolutionary biology,
which relies on genetic
clues to decipher relationships between organisms.
Originally, however, they were not examining brown fat thermogenesis, but instead were looking for
clues to the function of ERRβ, a protein about
which little was known at the time, except that it was closely related to ERRα, appeared in brown fat cells, and also worked as a so - called nuclear receptor — a molecular switch for gene activation that can be turned on by
small lipophilic molecules or a signaling protein partner.
The two
clues we do get about the car's overall shape comes at the back in the form of a dual - exit exhaust and a
small ducktail spoiler creeping out of the camouflaged trunk, both of
which give the car a more sporty appeal — a must for BMW owners around the world.
More
clues are gathered by a number of varied mini-games in
which you partake in experiments and re-enactments usually taking on the form of a
small puzzle.
A series of fundamental
clues can be found in the pamphlet handed to me by JJ PEET when we first met.1 Scaled to the size of a
small envelope, this rogue little booklet is made from a digitally scanned collection of torn book pages, graph paper, and masking tape, parts of
which have been whited or taped out and then scribbled or typed over with simple but commanding words and phrases.