Job 33:6
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Because that is the false evolutionary assumption of geology, the present is key to the past. So that you admit at least to rapid burial of layers this large and this amount?
‘If one estimates the total thickness of the British Coal Measures as about 1000 m, laid down in about 10 million years, then, assuming a constant rate of sedimentation, it would have taken 100 000 years to bury a tree 10 m high, which is ridiculous.
‘Alternatively, if a 10 m tree were buried in 10 years, that would mean 1000 km in a million years or 10 000 km in 10 million years (i.e. the duration of the coal measures). This is equally ridiculous and we cannot escape the conclusion that sedimentation was at times very rapid indeed and at other times there were long breaks in sedimentation, though it looks both uniform and continuous’
Just curious on your formation of coal theory if this be the case. I dont really disagree with your post. I disagree on the circular reasoning used to create geological column [see op]. So than we can agree it points to rapid burial. Thousands are found in different locations and "geological ages" so than you would have to admit where they are found, it shows rapid burial.
This is just a misunderstanding of geology. Its the same thing with your erosion of continents statement. Nobody assumes constant rates of deposition or erosion over millions of years. The world cycles, just as water flows from rivers to oceans, evaporates and rains, and repeats...
An avalanche might occur, in which 50 feet of soil might be deposited in 10 minutes. But then afterwards, the avalanche is over.
When rivers erode, they erode at accelerated rates when land is uplifted, but at slower rates as water reaches equilibrium. Also adjustments occur based on rock densities. Hence why erosive resistant rocks often cap mountain tops.
And these trees can be found in various formations, but they arent present across more than a single period of time.
And these are all concepts confined within old earth geology. In present times we have floods and earthquakes and avalanches that create large deposits in a very brief amount of time. And so to would we in the past. But this is still far from young earth catastrophism.
But really this isn't really necessary in the case of coal formation because it looks like we have millions of years to work with.
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