Job 33:6
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- Jun 15, 2017
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Is that the same area? It looks to be SE of the Sucre area in a much lower area of the uplift?
No matter. I scanned my library and found this:
"Scientists who study tracks deduce several unusual behavioural characteristics of dinosaurs, such as parallel sets of tracks presume gregarious dinosaurs. However, within the Flood model, such behaviours may be unusual, and mean nothing about normal dinosaur habits. There are also a number of features of the tracks that not only are better understood within a diluvial model, but also tell us some of the unique events that occurred during the Flood. Just the preservation of billions of tracks indicates rapid sedimentation, since studies of modern tracks reveals that footprints deteriorate and are destroyed rapidly (page 18). The tracks are practically always found on bedding planes, generally capping sedimentary units, which suggests a cycle of sedimentation during the Flood followed by a brief exposure above the water. Why wouldn't the tracks be found throughout the beds if the sediment was deposited slowly over long periods of time?" [Michael J. Oard, A Review Of, "Dinosaur Tracks and Other Fossil Footprints of the Western United States." CEN Technical Journal, 1997, p.38]
"Also of interest is the author's contradictory interpretation. The tracks are in the Navajo Sandstone, interpreted to be desert sand that lithified (hardened) into rock. So, they postulate a 'desert oasis' or watering hole. If this were the case, why are practically all the tracks going in the same direction? Animals usually mill around a watering hole, making tracks in multiple directions... What are dinosaurs doing in a huge desert, even at an oasis? Desert oases are normally small and could hardly sustain dinosaurs in such large numbers. Moreover, there are 60 other track sites in the Navajo Sandstone, mostly of carnivorous dinosaurs. Just as mysterious from a uniformitarian point of view is that hardly any bones are found in the Navajo Sandstone. One would think that with shifting sands, a huge number of dinosaurs would easily be covered up, which is the first step in fossilization." [Michael J. Oard, "Dancing Dinosaurs? Stony footprints point to something more serious." Creation Ministries International, 2008]
Thanks for the heads up on this one. I had never given it much thought.
BTW, I also found this short 1 minute video on dino tracks which highlights some of Michael Oard's points:
Dan
And just to confirm, uplift here post dates Cretaceous bedding. Else Cretaceous bedding nor Paleozoic bedding would not have undergone ductile nor brittle deformation. To further explain, if Cretaceous deposits post dated uplift, then Cretaceous deposits wouldnt be deformed.
And yes it's a cross section of the same area. This alleged wave that passed over hundreds of miles isn't going to be confined to a small area.
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