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Actually on many peaks, all that is left, is quartzite capping mountain ranges. This is accurate in many mountains here on the east coast of the US.
"Of course the sedimentary rock formed under water during depositions argument applies to above water land surfaces."
And regarding this ^, it does apply, because many of the above ground mountain ranges originated as underwater depositional environments.
Lets look at your claim in a mathematical sense. You said that north america would have eroded in 10 million years. Now how did you come to this conclusion?
You mentioned before, tons of sediment being washed out from the himilayas. But there is no shortage of sediment to be eroded as the entire indian subcontinent is contributing to what may be eroded. And of course the entire Indian subcontinent is contains far more mass than that which is eroded.
Sorry for delay, I have bitten off a bigger bite than I can chew. I have multiple threads on four forums going with hundreds of posts and have not been able to devote much time. Hopefully some will die down soon.
you said "quartzite capping mountain ranges"
and yet erosion happens, seems your arguing for me for a sec.
you said
"And regarding this ^, it does apply, because many of the above ground mountain ranges originated as underwater depositional environments."
I dont disagree one bit. This is why I think you have not understood the argument. Try it like this. Pretend we are back in supposed earth history 300 mya. All of those above water surfaces would have been long ago eroded. It does not say no above land today, small islands and such perhaps some small slender mountains near fault lines etc. but not the old "ages" of fossil bearing sedimentary rock as claimed by evolution.
The quote of erosion of the continent "in a mere 10 million years" came from
S Judson and D F Ritter 1964 rates of regional denudation in the united states journal of geophysical research 69; 3395-3401 R H Dott Jr and R L Batten
I dont disagree, that is why erosion takes so long.
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