21st December 2002 at 11:02 AM tacoman528 said this in Post #44
considering that no one is talking to me, I will now show you why I think there was a flood.
experiment:
take a glass jar, fill it halfway with dirt, then fill it with water. You will get mud, put the jar onto a table and let it sit for a few minutes. What do you see? What does it kinda look like? It looks like the layers of rock that make up the crust of the earth. The evolutionary scientists say that each layer is a million years older than the layer on top. That's not necessarily true. With water covering the whole earth, the tides and currents are not blocked by land so they just...flow. causing the dirt at the bottom to get mixed up. Which would cause the same effect as the jar with water. You get layers. Not necessarily older and younger, just heavier and lighter.
Just as you said, the layers would arrange themselves from heavier to lighter. So if this is what went on with the flood, then why are there heavy layers on top of lighter ones in the geological strata? The fact that we do not see the real geological coloum arranged from heavier to lighter is a major strike against a global flood.
There are other anamolies in the strata that go against what one would expect from a global flood. For example in some layers there are fossilized animal foot prints. Did animals walk on the bottom of the ocean? Another exampl is that in the strata there are fine layers of salts that are caused by a large body of water evaporating and leaving a percipitate. How would these layers be formed if they were under water at the time?
They have found trees standing through many of these rock layers. If the evolutionary scientist was right, these trees would have to have lasted for millions of years without rotting. It takes a heck of a lot less time for trees to rot than that. And how could the trees have lived millions of years. Even if there were trees that could do that, the continuous pileup of sediment would cover their trunk and kill them. Also, I dont think that a tree could grow through solid rock very far, I've seen concrete broken by trees, but these trees (that are fossilized by the way) are going through many dozens of feet of rock. They would not live. If you need proof of this, hovind has pictures on his website at www-drdino-com. If you don't want to go there, you're just shunning the truth. I don't want to get off subject here so I will continue:
What Mr. Hovind failed to tell you is that sometimes there are other fossil trees that grew above these trees. If they were under water when they were covered, then how could there be other trees that grew above them? These are not entire trees either. The average hieght is usually about two meters, with the top having rotted away (another strike against a quick covering). There are several known methods that could quickly cover that much of the tree without taking millions (or even thousands) of years.
They say that the older things are found in the lower rock layers. The evolutionary scientist would say that this disproves the flood. Not necessarily, the clams that they said evolved first, were already on the bottom when the flood started, unlike birds and humans, who could climb up rocks until they got stuck. The clams, therefore, would be lower than human and bird bones. Clams are also denser then birds or humans.
Have you ever seen flood disaters on the news? If what you say was true, then everyone would be able to get to higher ground in time. Yet people sare still caught in floods. Yet you expect people to have time to get to higher ground in a flood that was thousands of times worse then any flood in history? Don't you think at least one human would be caught unprepared in the bottom layers? Yet there are absolutely zero. Does this make sense?
About all the many arthropod species that had to have survived the flood.
Most of them probably died, but keep in mind that insects can live many months longer than chordates (animals with a backbone) can. All the dead trees and animals that float to the top would probably be sufficient for these insects. These boyant objects would even double as a boat. I don't think that Noah took all the insect onto the ark.
Woah there. Insects can live months longer then chordates? Did you know the life of the common housefly is measured in weeks? Many insects have lifespans much shorter then the one year. This means that they not only have to survive, they have to find mates and lay eggs as well. They have to do this while the worste rain strom ever is beating down on them. Just curious, but have you ever seen a moth try to fly with wet wings?
And what about babies that require parental supervision in order to survive? Things like lions need to be taught by thier mother's how to hunt. Also things like elephants take years to reach maturity and would be easy prey for predators without the protection of thier parents. The same goes for many other large herbavors.About elephants and rhino's and possibly even dinosaurs, Noah would probably take babies. They eat less, sleep more, and they don't take up as much space as their adult counterparts. And about how they would grow up. Noah was only on the ark for 5 months, not long enough for an elephant to reach full size.
Thats enough for now, its late and I have a hard time typing in this forum because it lags like crazy for me.
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