Why this difference in erosiion patterns? Why does this erosion pattern match the dating of the islands, and the distance from the current active spot. Why does this correlation exist at all in your model?
I don't think you have shown that erosion matches dating. To do this you would have to know the mass prior to erosion and the mass subsequent to having subsided below the point where erosion is an efficient process.
Of course the fact is that islands who are above sea level are considerably flat because lava flows are very inviscous and tend to flow to great distances. Furthermore volcanic basements of old islands are not entirely flat. Clearly they have been eroded by surface processes, however that guyots are largely flat is mostly due to atoll growth.
Anyways, my point is that you have not presented the relevant (good) data which clearly exhibits that quantitative erosion very noticably increases with age. This is not going to be suggested merely from topographic data, because of other processes which effect topography
CPT is tied to the global flood model.
Actually, CPT essentially replaces it.
Why the need for CPT if the water never got higher than the hawaiian islands? What value does the CPT model have to the flood needing creationist if the water level never got higher than current sea level?
I never said that the water never got higher than the hawaiian islands or exceeded current sea level.
I guess I still don't see how your model explains the correlation between all of the lines of evidence and methods of dating we find at the Hawaiian islands.
The only dating method that has been established is the radioisotopic technique. However CPT does not directly address radioisotopic dating except by stating that it is useful as a relative dating method.
The mainstream model seems to explain the evidence well, consists of mechanism that are all measurable today and are still occuring at rates consistent with what we would expect if it is these processes that formed the Hawaiian islands. Not sure why you need to pursue the CPT model with its issues related to explaining well understood (and undisputed dating techniques) and heat issues. Seems like you are trying to build a model based on nothing but your desire to do so while avoiding the evidence we already have that your model is incorrect.
Avoiding evidence is hardly the case. There are many instances of disconfirming evidence for CPT. The problem is that hypotheses will always have instances of disconfirming evidence. However it is the goal of hypotheses to avoid falsification by those instances of disconfirmation by explaining them. CPT has continued development and now explains far more than it used to.
I don't see CPT in any way as a comprehensive model that can explain the correlation of data we have of the Hawaiian islands. It certainly doesn't have much support or evidence to support it other than miraculous happenings that apparently left little evidence.
What is 'evidence'? Do you know? In what way is it compatible with the assertion that CPT explains 'little evidence'? Im not sure you completely understand what is actually observed with the Hawaiian island chain and emperor seamounts.
-Chris Grose