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Interesting.This is a MEANDER BEND in the Colorado River. It is pretty much the definition of a meandering stream.
Is that standard protestant doctrine?God is pleased to be the transcendental imagination, the source of all creativity. That is my point.
Interesting.
I didn't know this.
But which came first, in your opinion?
The meander bend, or the Grand Canyon?
I say the meander bend came first.
No, they aren't.Actually embedded meanders of that sort are a death sentence to the Noah's Ark story.
Interesting.
I didn't know this.
But which came first, in your opinion?
The meander bend, or the Grand Canyon?
I say the meander bend came first.
Alright, thanks!Because the Grand Canyon formed very much in line with the meander bend. As the land rose the river, which was at a relatively low gradient, kept cutting down into the land.
Meanders form precisely because the gradient of the river is not sufficiently high to give the water the energy to cut through the land in a straight line. It "meanders" to find the path of least resistance. Simultaneously the land is rising meaning the cutting action will continue on deeper and deeper.
Alright, thanks!
Well, for the record, I don't think erosion had anything to do with the appearance of the Grand Canyon.I'm not really sold on the old earth approach that the canyon was cut as the plateau was rising.
Keep in mind the recently flood deposited strata was still plastic and would erode easier than hard rock.
I'm not really sold on the old earth approach that the canyon was cut as the plateau was rising.
Keep in mind the recently flood deposited strata was still plastic and would erode easier than hard rock.
Yes we appreciate that you think you know better than geologists who have actually studied the subject. Maybe you can put your expertise to use explaining the fossil record without using evolution.
Don't be silly AV, of course they are. Those could not have been formed quickly post flood. The meander had to be there first obviously. Let's start with that point.No, they aren't.
Actually they are a testament to how nature obeys God.
When He said the Flood was over, the Flood was over.
And the waters just didn't wait to be raptured off the earth, they were ordered to go to a deportation spot.
And as I said before, when they were ordered to go, they didn't discuss it -- they went.
And they went along predetermined paths that cut serpentine designs in the earth.
Matthew 8:27 But the men marvelled, saying, What manner of man is this, that even the winds and the sea obey him!
Don't be silly AV, of course they are. Those could not have been formed quickly post flood. The meander had to be there first obviously. Let's start with that point.
Didn't I say that already?The meander had to be there first obviously. Let's start with that point.
I say the meander bend came first.
Nope, we can tell by canyon walls in that the rock was extremely well consolidated. Soft sediments do not make stable slopes. You could ask the people in a neighborhood close to where I live:I'm not really sold on the old earth approach that the canyon was cut as the plateau was rising.
Keep in mind the recently flood deposited strata was still plastic and would erode easier than hard rock.
Yes, you did. And by doing do you admitted that there was no global flood. You may not realize that you did so, but that is beside the point.Didn't I say that already?
Which s exactly what i said...the meanders were there first. They formed post flood....then were deepened and widened rapidly.
1) Hydrolic sorting (presented above)
3) Chance
First, you must understand the model.
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