The earth had nowhere near the height of landmass that we have today. The continents were probably more clustered, perhaps even into a single mass.
This is an ad hoc explanation - i.e. there's no reason whatsoever to believe that the continents were different a few thousand years ago. We know how fast they move now and we know that for them to move faster would produce an awful lot of heat via friction.
There surely were only small hills and no mountains, at least to the height of what we call mountains here in British Columbia.
"surely?" How so?
As to how the animals were fed on the ark that is also a puzzle, but solvable. There were approximately 15,000 air breathing species on the ark. The ark is large enough that approximately half the ark would be required to house the animals. This is not impossible. The average dinosaur was only the size of a sheep and if immature ones were used they would be even smaller.
Many animals require a significant amount of training from a parent in order to be able to successfully find food, walk, fly or whatever.
Many have specialized diets and eat only one other animal or species. Many are purely carnivorous.
Almost all sea creatures are specialised for a certain salinity of water. A sudden mixing of fresh and salt water would be lethal to virtually all species. Land plants wouldn't be able to photosynthesize without access to carbon dioxide underwater.
After the flood, every animal had to get back to its special habitat - the koalas only went to Australia, the polar bears all went north and the penguins went south. They had to do this without the (presumably by now quite hungry) lions and T-Rexs chomping the smaller guys.
They then had to produce, from either one or 7 breeding pairs, the entire earth's population in just 4,000 years. Even if this were possible - it isn't, and not just because of time but also because of problems with incest - this should show up as a massive genetic bottleneck. But it doesn't. And of course, if you say only "kinds" went on the ark, whatever they are, you have to evolve - in just 4,000 years - all the other species that we see today.
You've got a bit of a problem.
As to how the waters abated quick enough after the flood, evaporation would not be sufficient to do the job but the uplifting of land mass would. I listened to creation scientist (Emil Sylvestru) at a local church recently who said the model for continental drift works best at a speed of four metres per minute or something like that so the uplifting of the land could have also occurred at a significant rate to accomplish this.
You know what happens these days when the continents move quickly?
	The tectonic plates aren't just little floating islands - they have to scrape past one another. That, by the way, is like taking a two cliffs, mashing them up against one another, and trying to drag them past each other. You are trying to do this at 4 metres per minute!
Do you know what friction is? I can tell you that trying to drag two continental plates past each other releases an awful lot of energy.
The ice age following the flood can be shown using a climate model with atmospheric dust (from volcanoes and/or wind erosion caused by high winds without plant cover) and warm oceans. The ice age would have lasted approximately 1,000 years.
Evidence? How come noone noticed this? You'd think the Egyptians would have something to say about building their pyramids when it was so nippy.
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