What a nose! If you’ve ever seen a bloodhound at work, you can’t help but be impressed. Such tracking skills could never have arisen by accident. Only one explanation makes sense.
I can't remember when I didn’t have a dog, but I remember my first hunting dog. Roscoe was a large black-and-tan, bugle-voiced coonhound. Many a night that dog and I would head to the woods. I was armed with a 22-caliber single shot rifle and a kerosene lantern. Roscoe and I walked the countryside waiting for him to catch the scent of a raccoon. What a thrill when he picked up the trail. What a remarkable nose!
All through history man has used dogs as companions and hunting partners. Many canine varieties have been bred specifically for hunting. One stands out from them all—the bloodhound, which is very similar to coonhounds and often bred with them.
Originally developed to hunt wild boar and deer, the bloodhound can pick up a scent up to twelve days old. Often called a nose with a dog attached, the bloodhound has a larger nasal chamber than most dogs. It is believed that bloodhounds can detect as few as one or two invisible scent particles when on a trail.
This impressive ability is due to God’s design of the dog’s nose. Its nostrils lead directly to the olfactory area, where receptors pick up scent particles. The more receptors in the nose, the better the sense of smell. A human being has around 5 million scent receptors, while a bloodhound has closer to 300 million.
The other important aspect of a good sense of smell is having a large part of the brain dedicated to sorting through all that information. This breed’s olfactory bulb is around forty times larger than a human’s. Bloodhounds smell things the way we see them. Every object has a unique “scent picture.”
But bloodhounds depend on more than their nose to smell. When on a trail, folds of skin fall around their eyes and act as blinders, keeping the dog focused on the job. It is often claimed that the bloodhound uses the wrinkles on its head and lips to catch traces of scent that linger on plants and in the air. Even the large, drooping ears of the bloodhound may help funnel scent particles to its nose as the large dog is tracking.
The design of the canine nose poses a problem for evolution. Evolutionists believe that its intricately designed nasal chamber and scent cells developed by chance and that the dog’s brain learned to recognize specific scents and single out one from all the others. The alternative is to believe in an awesome God who knows all things and created all things. God specially designed the dog kind with the ability to track, and that makes sense.
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http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/am/v7/n2/bloodhound