Douglaangu v2.0 said:
His point is that you havn't given scientific proof of the flood, only speculation.
Like he said, where is the data?
So all I have to do is travel out there and climb up the column drill the rock and do hardness tests to verify that the rock is consistent in hardness, proving that the erosion variation is not due to rock hardness.
Then as soon as I get out of jail for defacing public landmarks, I can post the data here where you will inform me that the data is inadequate or faulty in some way.
Ha! Ha!
But I already have several collaborating evidences.
1. The rock has horizontal random erosion marks at equal elevations on all visible columns which can be verified visibly, it does not require me to climb the column because measurement would make it no more certain then a visual observation.
2. The Rock has ventricle equally spaced pillars which can be verified by the photograph, enlarge it if you need to.
I would return with no more compelling information if I claimed the thing and measured it myself, as you would easily doubt me more then your own eyes.
3. The grain in the rock can only go one way not two.
4. Even if the rock could have a grain in two directions the pillars are identical distances apart and grain thickness is random, as found from scientific research.
5. This visual effect shown is evident in hard rock faces which have large wave impact as can be easily found by a web search, as I have.
6. You can not explain the structure in any other logical way, I have tried, how I have tried.
If you can not believe your eyes, I doubt the numbers on a paper would convince you because they wouldn't have convenced me either.
I didn't invent rock structure research or knowledge of grain direction and rock creation, it is a study of science.
I didn't invent the study of wave erosion, it has ben scientifically researched.
I didn't define the form wind and ice erosion take, it is has been scientifically researched.
Do you have no scientific curiosity?
Is faith in your beliefs more important then science and truth?
Yes, a hard question indeed.
Duane