I don't have to cite anyone but you, you just said they can accumulate over tens of thousands or even millions of years as it is interpreted at Joggins.
The
entire stratigraphic column of the Joggins Formation was deposited over a period of about a million years. You don't have to take my word for it, you can read about it here:
http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2005AM/finalprogram/abstract_91204.htm
This timeframe, once again, is further evidenced by the fact that Joggins preserves successive
in situ fossil forests. The
individual trees themselves may may be burried over a period of a few hundred years (a very fast geological event), but the
succession of forests,
rooted in palaeosols, cannot be accounted for within the 40-day timeframe you're espousing. I don't know how I can make this any more clear. If you're going to advocate a sudden deposition of the Joggins strata virtually at once, you're going to have to deal with these specifics.
I'd say the interpretation of what is being seen with the so-called paleosols is the problem.
In that case, feel free to do the science and write up the paper showing that there are no palaeosols at Joggins. I take it you're a geologist, too?
As far as you speaking with the atheist's on the dig, I'll talk to him and see if he wants to talk to you or get on this web-site to debate here or not.
Great!
Varves are no problem with the global flood and knowing what I have found in the past the other things you mentioned like ichnofossils won't be either.
I know you're just going to reference another AiG article with regards to varves, so I'm just going to post this link in response now:
http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CD/CD241.html
Yes, varves are a problem for neocreationists, as are the millions of ichnofossils found throughout the fossil record. Take the Coconino sandstone footprints found in the neocreationist's favourite spot in the world, the Grand Canyon, for example. The violent waters that neocreationists claim carved the Grand Canyon could not also have deposited those repilian footprints, which require extremely calm depositional environments (to say nothing of the fact that the Coconino is primarily aeolian in origin anyway).
What you seem to refuse to consider is the flood did some things that cannot be reproduced.
If the conditions cannot be reproduced, then you shouldn't be arguing that there is scientific evidence for a global flood.
If I were to tell you that, a thousand years ago the world was covered in purple jelly but could not demonstrate it scientifically, wouldn't you write me off as a kook, too?
Also, right after the flood as the waters sought equilibrium a lot of things happened that were after math events that placed things the way we see them today.
Talk, talk, talk.
Also, you have the event in Peleg's day when the whole world's continental plates were moved around.
You should read your own sources:
http://www.answersingenesis.org/home/area/faq/dont_use.asp
Search for "Peleg".
When you say things like it is impossible for things like the ichnofossils to form what you have to do is proove that fossils form outside of catastrophy in the first place.
Let's be sure: the burden of proof is on
you to show how the Flood can account for the distribution of ichnofossils. Scientists already have a working model to account for them. If you're going to insist that it's wrong, then it's up to you to show
how it's wrong in each individual circumstance, and to come up with a better model that explains
more than the previous one.
Certainly animals that die and fall to the ground do not become fossils. It takes very special conditions for fossils to form. The flood provided those conditions.
So does the worldwide distribution of rivers, lakes, ponds, lagoons, marshes, dunes, estuaries, deltas, oceanic shelfs, etc., etc., etc. All of which we can identifiy by lithology, I might add.
The only thing the Flood model has going for it is that, on the surface, it would indeed seem like it might be a good explanation of the sediment and death represented in the fossil record. But when we look beyond the superficiality -- and we don't have to look very far -- we see that the Flood, in fact, cannot account for any of it. Christian geologists recognized this hundreds of years ago.
Sorry if I seem a bit short-tempered today, Jim, but these demonstrably false neocreationist arguments keep coming up time and again.