- Feb 17, 2005
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Something I'm really curious about is whether creationists actually have tried to do any modeling of what the Global Flood would have looked like. The more I learn, the more I suspect that they haven't - not because they can't so much as because they won't.
This afternoon over on campus I had the privilege of attending a presentation by fellow physics students about some advanced study courses they'd been doing. Among them was one about simulating double gyre circulation due to wind stress in the ocean. It's a very practical thing to do: double gyre circulations are essentially what drives things like the Gulf Stream, which delivers a lot of heat to Europe so that Brits don't freeze their noggins off a lot worse in winter.
The student was able to convincingly simulate ocean flow in the Atlantic, over a period of 5 years, given different wind conditions, which quite well reflected actual conditions given a very rough model (dept. head: "The Atlantic ocean basin isn't a rectangle, is it?"), and was able to successfully conclude that no, the Atlantic mid-ocean ridge didn't have anything much to do with why the Gulf Stream does what it does.
Given this kind of project, I'm beginning to wonder why the flood geologists still don't have any convincing numerical models of what a global flood looks like. This is the third ocean behavior modeling project I've seen. The first is of course the distributed computing project from climateprediction.org, which I'm running as I type, which computes data pretty much on a global scale, covering 160 years of development in half-hour intervals (which is presumably very good resolution!). The second is a project I saw on one of my lecturers' homepage, which is an upclose model of how basin shape affects flows of things like tsunamis and floods, and which included a pretty video (without sound - bummer) of a tsunami flooding a hypothetical Australian city. And the third is this project.
Mind you, the project I just described above wasn't done by a professor or even a postgrad. This was work done by at most a third-year undergrad student, as part of a courseload that included at least three other full-study courses, over half a year. In fact, given the amount of back-and-forth I've been having here about the Flood, I probably wouldn't mind taking on one or two geology courses to do some computational simulation myself.
Well, add to that the fact that AiG just built a $27 million museum.
I don't think there's any convincing excuse for Flood geology to not have working computational models, or at least to not have started on some.
This afternoon over on campus I had the privilege of attending a presentation by fellow physics students about some advanced study courses they'd been doing. Among them was one about simulating double gyre circulation due to wind stress in the ocean. It's a very practical thing to do: double gyre circulations are essentially what drives things like the Gulf Stream, which delivers a lot of heat to Europe so that Brits don't freeze their noggins off a lot worse in winter.
The student was able to convincingly simulate ocean flow in the Atlantic, over a period of 5 years, given different wind conditions, which quite well reflected actual conditions given a very rough model (dept. head: "The Atlantic ocean basin isn't a rectangle, is it?"), and was able to successfully conclude that no, the Atlantic mid-ocean ridge didn't have anything much to do with why the Gulf Stream does what it does.
Given this kind of project, I'm beginning to wonder why the flood geologists still don't have any convincing numerical models of what a global flood looks like. This is the third ocean behavior modeling project I've seen. The first is of course the distributed computing project from climateprediction.org, which I'm running as I type, which computes data pretty much on a global scale, covering 160 years of development in half-hour intervals (which is presumably very good resolution!). The second is a project I saw on one of my lecturers' homepage, which is an upclose model of how basin shape affects flows of things like tsunamis and floods, and which included a pretty video (without sound - bummer) of a tsunami flooding a hypothetical Australian city. And the third is this project.
Mind you, the project I just described above wasn't done by a professor or even a postgrad. This was work done by at most a third-year undergrad student, as part of a courseload that included at least three other full-study courses, over half a year. In fact, given the amount of back-and-forth I've been having here about the Flood, I probably wouldn't mind taking on one or two geology courses to do some computational simulation myself.
Well, add to that the fact that AiG just built a $27 million museum.
I don't think there's any convincing excuse for Flood geology to not have working computational models, or at least to not have started on some.