- Dec 16, 2002
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I had this thread going before the "incident". There had been no takers at that point so I'm hoping there might be this time around.
*NOTE*- I have a very similar (practically identical) thread in the non-Christians-allowed science forum in case anyone was wondering.
Firstly, I want to take us on a trip to the Burgess Shale of British Columbia. This fossil bed is located right in the middle of the Canadian Rockies and produces some of the world's greatest Cambrian fossils. Among the inhabitants are Anomalocaris, Opibinia, and Pikaia. What's amazing about this rock formation is that, not only are no modern taxa known from the formation, there are no terrestrial animals AT ALL and there are no vertebrates (but there is one chordate). A simple question. Why is it that not a single fossil of a type of organism alive today has been found in the Burgess Shale? Heck, why hasn't a single vertebrate creature or land dwelling organism been found there? You realize, of course, that if one mammalian molar were to be verified to have been found encased in this formation then the evolutionary timeline as we understand it would be shot, right? And yet, that molar or other piece of unexplainable evidence (there are many possiblilities) against modern evolutionary thinking has yet to be found. Doesn't any of that strike any YEC as being a tad strange? Is there some sort of mechanism that would have prevented a whale carcass or dinosaur femur from washing over to these bone beds? Is there some reason why we don't find mussels or crabs or limpets or other very common sea creatures here? Keep in mind, also, that many YECs believe that there was more terrestrial surface area before the flood. If that was the case then how did all these marine fossils end up here? The year it was underwater? Then how come there are so many fossil formations that have no marine life? Why?
Next question: why is it that the Morrison Formation in Colorado yields predominantly dinosaur bones? Why are there no living species of mammals or birds or even lizards ever to be found in the Morrison? Also, why is no sea life ever found in the Morrison? The Burgess Shale only yields sea life and yet the Morrison has none. Both formations were underwater for a year, right? So why does one have only extinct, invertebrate, marine life while the other has only extinct, terrestrial, vertebrate fauna? Is that just coincidence or is there some reason to this scheme of things? Also, why are no flowering plants known from the Morrison. How many North American habitats can you name that have no flowering plants in them? And yet there were none here.
Next question: why is it that the Hell Creek Formation of Montana, North Dakota, and South Dakota also yields predominantly dinosaur bones but ones of completely different species (heck, genera)? Wasn't the flood violent enough to carve the Grand Canyon and move the tectonic plates hundreds of miles and other such things? If it was so violent, how come it still couldn't move Morrison dinosaur specimens to Hell Creek and visa versa? Why does the Hell Creek Formation yield almost the exact same type of remains as the Lance Formation in Wyoming and yet has no species overlap whatsoever with the Morrison? If a global flood did happen we should expect fossil beds to be very mixed up, shouldn't we? The force behind the flood water was supposed to have carved the Grand Canyon back 277 miles wasn't it? But this didn't move any bird skulls to the Burgess Shale? It didn't move any Triceratops metacarpals to the Morrison? It didn't move any Brachiosaur teeth to Hell Creek?
Next question: why is it that in the Green River Formation of Utah, Colorado, and Wyoming, there are no dinosaurs of any sort (unless you count birds
)? Instead of dinosaurs and anomalocaris and stegosaurs and things that are found in the other fossil formations I've listed, you find very modern looking animals such as fresh water fish, snakes, birds, primitive bats, turtles, and that type of stuff? If the currents that the Flood wielded could create the Grand Canyon, how come it couldn't drift a single Allosaurus tooth the distance between the Morrison and the Green River formations? Not only are they both in Colorado, they're only 240 miles apart (need I remind you that the Grand Canyon is 277 miles in length). Isn't it very bizarre that the Flood could carve a giant canyon farther than it can carry a theropod tooth? Isn't it coincidental that no salt water taxa are known from any of the last three formations I've mentioned? Isn't it coincidental that not a single flowering plant is known from the Morrison yet many are well documented from the Hell Creek and Green River Formations? Jeeze!
Next, the Delmarva Penninsula fossil bed in Delaware. This bone bed contains the fossils of crocodiles, rhinoceros, and primitive horses among other things. Also in the sediment are marine animals such as mullusks, sharks and whales. Unfortunatly (for YEC at least), nothing even close to unusual is found in the site. No iguanodon skeletons (well known from beds on the east coast), no humans, no therapsids... All of these wonderfully bizarre animals known to have lived in North America are completely absent in the site save only some semi-advanced Miocene mammals and some unexciting marine organisms. Why didn't the flood move any unexpected bones/teeth to this fossil deposit? How come there aren't any dinosaurs or therapsids or Cambrian sea life known from this site? Personnally, I'm seeing a pattern here.
Next. The Judith River formation of Montana and Alberta. I love this formation
. This fossil bed (sort of inbetween all these other dinosaur formations and the Burgess Shale, huh?) has no species overlap with its very close neighbor, Hell Creek. Both formations have relatively similar fauna but nothing too precise. Judith River boasts Daspletosaurus but no Tyrannosaurus, Chasmosaurus but no Triceratops, Edmontonia but no Ankylosaurus. In fact, I can only find two examples of overlapping genera between the two formations (no overlapping species mind you). Why is there no species overlap and such little genera overlap? Why is it only Parasaurolophus skeletons washed into the Judith River formation while only Anatotitan skeletons washed into the Hell Creek formation? Why didn't the flood waters carry a Torosaurus skull from Hell Creek to the Judith? Why didn't Tyrannosaurus's body get washed to the other side of Montana when the flood had the strength to carve the Grand Canyon and mess up radioactive decay rates and all that stuff? Is all this skeletal placement just some huge coincidence or is it possible, just possible, that this global flood never happened?
Next; the White River formation. This is located in South Dakota, Wyoming, and Nebraska and yields some of North America's greatest Oligocene fossils. This formation (close to lots of the others I've mentioned huh?) is very well known for its mammal fossils. Among the finds include North American marsupials, saber-toothed cats, North American camels, rodents, snakes and many other types of less spectacular or less well known (by the public) animals. In case you didn't notice, some animals not found in the White River formation include therapsids, dinosaurs, pterosaurs, cambrian sea life, sharks, mullusks (except for the terrestrial variety), whales, humans, chimps, modern horses, thecodonts, hippos, seals, dolphins, and countless other creatures that were supposedly living (or being killed rather) at the time this sediment was being laid down. Isn't it then a coincidence of tremendous magnitude to think that the only organisms that managed to be fossilized here were some primitive plecential and marsupial mammals and some boring reptiles? How is this possible? Was there some Oligocene mammal magnet sitting under the location of the sediment? Did this magnet attract all these different types of animals to this location so that the fossil record is nice and organised for us humans? Or is it possible that this unfathomably powerful flood actually didn't happen on a global scale?
Next! The La Brea tar pits of Los Angeles, California. These tar pits (one of my favorite places to visit) present us with one of the most classic examples of a predator trap. How the creatures were fossilized, detailed here:
http://www.tarpits.org/info/faq/faqfossil.html,
explains remarkably well why nearly all the fossils found at the site are of predators and evolution explains remarkably well why they are all small to medium sized birds and terrestrial mammals. From condors to vultures to saber-toothed cats to dire wolves to mastodons to American lions (real, homegrown american lions to American camels to enormous sloths, the tar seems to have pulled them all in. Strange how there aren't any velociraptors, isn't it. Or Coelophysis or Allosaurus or Tyrannosaurus or Daspletosaurus or Troodontids, isn't it. I mean, in a fight between a pack of dire wolves and a T-rex or two, I'd bet on the T-rex. So the question is, why are no dinosaur fossils known from these tar pits. For that matter, why are there mammal-like reptiles or any of them fansy pterosaurs? Why isn't there Cambrian sea life at this site? Actually, why isn't there any sea life at this site? Underwater for a year?
Next on our trip we will travel to Africa and the Tendaguru formation of Tanzania. What's fascinating about this place is we find similar fauna to that of the Morrison (you remember the Morrison, right?
). We find Brachiosaurs, Allosaurs, Elaphrosaurs, Ceratosaurs and many others (I'll cite more if you wish
). Isn't it bizarre, for YEC, that we find such very similar fauna thousands of miles away from each other, and yet, we find completely different fauna just a few hundred miles away. I see no rational explaination for it. Frankly, a pack of Dromeosaurs or a single Tyrannosaurus rex could whipe the floor with Morrison and Tendaguru carnivores. I wish someone could respond, I do enjoy company.
Well, I hope I get some reaction to this. If not I'll cite more fossil formations that continue to disprove the Noah flood simply on the basis of fossil organization. Also, if you have read this thread and cannot answer my questions, I ask you to consider the possibility that there was never any enormous, violent, world wide flood.
*NOTE*- I have a very similar (practically identical) thread in the non-Christians-allowed science forum in case anyone was wondering.
Firstly, I want to take us on a trip to the Burgess Shale of British Columbia. This fossil bed is located right in the middle of the Canadian Rockies and produces some of the world's greatest Cambrian fossils. Among the inhabitants are Anomalocaris, Opibinia, and Pikaia. What's amazing about this rock formation is that, not only are no modern taxa known from the formation, there are no terrestrial animals AT ALL and there are no vertebrates (but there is one chordate). A simple question. Why is it that not a single fossil of a type of organism alive today has been found in the Burgess Shale? Heck, why hasn't a single vertebrate creature or land dwelling organism been found there? You realize, of course, that if one mammalian molar were to be verified to have been found encased in this formation then the evolutionary timeline as we understand it would be shot, right? And yet, that molar or other piece of unexplainable evidence (there are many possiblilities) against modern evolutionary thinking has yet to be found. Doesn't any of that strike any YEC as being a tad strange? Is there some sort of mechanism that would have prevented a whale carcass or dinosaur femur from washing over to these bone beds? Is there some reason why we don't find mussels or crabs or limpets or other very common sea creatures here? Keep in mind, also, that many YECs believe that there was more terrestrial surface area before the flood. If that was the case then how did all these marine fossils end up here? The year it was underwater? Then how come there are so many fossil formations that have no marine life? Why?
Next question: why is it that the Morrison Formation in Colorado yields predominantly dinosaur bones? Why are there no living species of mammals or birds or even lizards ever to be found in the Morrison? Also, why is no sea life ever found in the Morrison? The Burgess Shale only yields sea life and yet the Morrison has none. Both formations were underwater for a year, right? So why does one have only extinct, invertebrate, marine life while the other has only extinct, terrestrial, vertebrate fauna? Is that just coincidence or is there some reason to this scheme of things? Also, why are no flowering plants known from the Morrison. How many North American habitats can you name that have no flowering plants in them? And yet there were none here.
Next question: why is it that the Hell Creek Formation of Montana, North Dakota, and South Dakota also yields predominantly dinosaur bones but ones of completely different species (heck, genera)? Wasn't the flood violent enough to carve the Grand Canyon and move the tectonic plates hundreds of miles and other such things? If it was so violent, how come it still couldn't move Morrison dinosaur specimens to Hell Creek and visa versa? Why does the Hell Creek Formation yield almost the exact same type of remains as the Lance Formation in Wyoming and yet has no species overlap whatsoever with the Morrison? If a global flood did happen we should expect fossil beds to be very mixed up, shouldn't we? The force behind the flood water was supposed to have carved the Grand Canyon back 277 miles wasn't it? But this didn't move any bird skulls to the Burgess Shale? It didn't move any Triceratops metacarpals to the Morrison? It didn't move any Brachiosaur teeth to Hell Creek?
Next question: why is it that in the Green River Formation of Utah, Colorado, and Wyoming, there are no dinosaurs of any sort (unless you count birds
Next, the Delmarva Penninsula fossil bed in Delaware. This bone bed contains the fossils of crocodiles, rhinoceros, and primitive horses among other things. Also in the sediment are marine animals such as mullusks, sharks and whales. Unfortunatly (for YEC at least), nothing even close to unusual is found in the site. No iguanodon skeletons (well known from beds on the east coast), no humans, no therapsids... All of these wonderfully bizarre animals known to have lived in North America are completely absent in the site save only some semi-advanced Miocene mammals and some unexciting marine organisms. Why didn't the flood move any unexpected bones/teeth to this fossil deposit? How come there aren't any dinosaurs or therapsids or Cambrian sea life known from this site? Personnally, I'm seeing a pattern here.
Next. The Judith River formation of Montana and Alberta. I love this formation
Next; the White River formation. This is located in South Dakota, Wyoming, and Nebraska and yields some of North America's greatest Oligocene fossils. This formation (close to lots of the others I've mentioned huh?) is very well known for its mammal fossils. Among the finds include North American marsupials, saber-toothed cats, North American camels, rodents, snakes and many other types of less spectacular or less well known (by the public) animals. In case you didn't notice, some animals not found in the White River formation include therapsids, dinosaurs, pterosaurs, cambrian sea life, sharks, mullusks (except for the terrestrial variety), whales, humans, chimps, modern horses, thecodonts, hippos, seals, dolphins, and countless other creatures that were supposedly living (or being killed rather) at the time this sediment was being laid down. Isn't it then a coincidence of tremendous magnitude to think that the only organisms that managed to be fossilized here were some primitive plecential and marsupial mammals and some boring reptiles? How is this possible? Was there some Oligocene mammal magnet sitting under the location of the sediment? Did this magnet attract all these different types of animals to this location so that the fossil record is nice and organised for us humans? Or is it possible that this unfathomably powerful flood actually didn't happen on a global scale?
Next! The La Brea tar pits of Los Angeles, California. These tar pits (one of my favorite places to visit) present us with one of the most classic examples of a predator trap. How the creatures were fossilized, detailed here:
http://www.tarpits.org/info/faq/faqfossil.html,
explains remarkably well why nearly all the fossils found at the site are of predators and evolution explains remarkably well why they are all small to medium sized birds and terrestrial mammals. From condors to vultures to saber-toothed cats to dire wolves to mastodons to American lions (real, homegrown american lions to American camels to enormous sloths, the tar seems to have pulled them all in. Strange how there aren't any velociraptors, isn't it. Or Coelophysis or Allosaurus or Tyrannosaurus or Daspletosaurus or Troodontids, isn't it. I mean, in a fight between a pack of dire wolves and a T-rex or two, I'd bet on the T-rex. So the question is, why are no dinosaur fossils known from these tar pits. For that matter, why are there mammal-like reptiles or any of them fansy pterosaurs? Why isn't there Cambrian sea life at this site? Actually, why isn't there any sea life at this site? Underwater for a year?

Next on our trip we will travel to Africa and the Tendaguru formation of Tanzania. What's fascinating about this place is we find similar fauna to that of the Morrison (you remember the Morrison, right?
Well, I hope I get some reaction to this. If not I'll cite more fossil formations that continue to disprove the Noah flood simply on the basis of fossil organization. Also, if you have read this thread and cannot answer my questions, I ask you to consider the possibility that there was never any enormous, violent, world wide flood.