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You left out the rest of the conversation...Boy: Wow, grandpa, this canyon is a pretty big one. Why'd you bring me here?
Grandpa: Cuz I want you to see how canyons are made.
Boy: This must be the 'Grand Canyon' they tell us about at school. It musta took jillions of yrs to get like this, right grandpa?
Grandpa: Nope. It's the canyon caused by Mount St. Helens and it was carved out in one day, the day of the eruption in 1980.
Boy: You mean that stream of water didn't carve it out over jillions of yrs?
Grandpa: Nope. It happened in a very short time.
Boy: What's that picture you got there in your hand, grandpa?
Grandpa: A picture of the Grand Canyon.
Boy: Wow, it's a lot bigger. I guess it took a few more days to make that canyon, huh, gramps?
Grandpa:You're catching on fast, boy.
Son: So what does the talk/origins website say, Dad?Son: Hey, dad, What do ya think of all these dead fossil-like trees?
Professor: Right. They've been becoming like that over millions of years.
Son: But Dad, why are so many still standing? Why didn't they rot and go back to the soil?
Professor: There are several theories about how that happened, son.
Son: But none of the ones we've seen have roots or even bark. How could they stand up for millions of years without deteriorating?
Professor: Uh.....:o...Let me get my laptop out and I'll check with talk/origins.
"Uniformitarianism" is the position that all geological processes occur at slow, uniform rates. Obviously, this isn't true. Some processes occur rapidly (e.g., landslides) and some occur slowly (e.g., mammilary deposits). So to label modern geology as "uniformitarian" in nature is just false. A better term would be "actualism".so, basically, the uniformitarian explanation is that it isnt due to uniform deposition
In your first post, you said that oceans were evidence for a global flood. Now you're saying that deserts are. That doesn't seem very consistent.Scientist: Take a look at this ridiculous depiction of what creationists think happened during the flood. What do you think of that?
Son: Yeah, it's pure idiocy. Even if it were true, if there was such a massive amount of water moving over the earth you would think it would leave some evidence. Right, Dad?
Scientist: Right.
Son: Say, how long do you think it will take to get through Monument Valley?
Scientist: Bored with the scenery, son?
Son: Naw, most of the west looks similar to this.
Scientist: A lot of it does. Those poor dumb creationists: still no evidence for a world, wide flood. (Yawn).
(That's not a shark.)Son: Dad, this has been such a great trip. Nearly 3,000 miles of driving and still no evidence for the so-called Genesis flood.
Scientist: Right, son. I told you that you couldn't believe those Bible thumpers at church.
Son: Yeah, I think I will probably quit going after all this. By the way, where are we headed now?
Scientist: On the way home we are going to stop at this great museum that's got the most fabulous fossil shark you've ever seen. The thing is virtually perfectly preserved.
Son: Really? Where did they find the shark?
Scientist: In Kansas.
It's not a shark. Your source is wrong. It's an osteoglossomorphan fish called Xiphactinus. Don't let details bog you down, though. You haven't let them so far.
Quote: "This prehistoric shark fossil is exhibited at the University of Kansas Natural History Museum. Many shark fossils were found in Kansas."
Multimedia Reporting (Broholm-Carroll): November 2009 Archives
Sharks 'evolve', right?
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