Chalnoth, your example is a little more vague than I was hoping for. I’ve been trying to think of the best example of a specific piece of physical evidence that contradicts young-earth creationism. There are a lot of possibilities, but AV asked for just
one, and I’d like it to be one that can’t be explained by any creationist model, not even the “embedded age” hypothesis.
AV, I guess I’ll go with the
Great Barrier Reef. Based on the growth rate of coral polyps, it would have taken at least 500,000 years for this reef to reach its current size. I know you would explain this by saying that God created the reef with the appearance of age, but this reef also poses a more serious problem for young-earth creationism.
Coral can’t survive in water that’s more than 150 feet deep, because it can’t live without sunlight. Slight changes in temperature and salinity also kill coral, so there’s no way this reef could have survived a global flood. Yet the structure of this reef shows that it’s grown continuously for as long as it’s existed, with only slight changes due to the sea level gradually rising after the end of the Ice Age. This isn’t possible if there was a global flood sometime within the past 10,000 years, which would have killed most of it.
Most of the theistic evolutionists at this forum would probably say that this doesn’t contradict the Bible, because they think of the flood story in Genesis as either an allegory or a massive localized flood. But I know that you think a literal interpretation of this is the only acceptable one, so the Great Barrier Reef definitely contradicts your interpretation of the Bible.
I’m not sure exactly why you needed me to provide a specific example of this, since other examples of the same thing have been posted before. But now that I’ve given you one, what do you have to say about the idea that when physical evidence like this contradicts your interpretation of the Bible, it’s the first which you reject rather than the second?