Of course, there were times in the past when it carried much more water than it does today and it was blocked by lava dams at various times over the past few hundred thousand years.duordi said:So you agree that the Colorado river could not have formed the grand canyon without a large water flow. The specifics are unimportant to the point and I will accept the concession.
Some lived at the bottom of the oceans, some were free swimming and some lived in intertidal zones. They are not the lowest lying fossils in the Grand Canyon however, that would be the stromatolites in some of the precambrian deposits.(Referring to triblobites)
Like at the bottom of a lake where they could be easily buried and make excellent fossils.
But somehow no modern bottom dwellers, even those that lived fixed to the bottom got buried with them. Why not?You see its not only where were they but where were they that would have been most often preserved.
A flying mammal of course.(with regard to flying reptiles)What would you call a bat?
But fossils of oligocene and miocene mammals are very common. They are never found in the Grand Canyon or anywhere else were fossils of earlier organisms are common.The point was high ground is not where you would have the best chance of finding fossils.
How did I conclude this?Very interesting that you have concluded that humans ( and the cities they built ) existed before or during the ice ages.
What underwater cities are you talking about? Are you talking about the Black Sea flood or what?
Let's see some evidence so far you have provided nothing but assertions about underwater cities and no evidence for a global flood.I am sure you will change your mind when you find out the dates you are suppose to believe. The under water cities are dated at 8000 years or less by non-catastrophic dating methods.
But for now we agree.
Continental Drift is well established by many factors. I suggest you study it.The centennial drift idea would place winter climate fossils at the equator along with tropical fossils at the poles.
Winter climate fossils have not been found at the equator, so large movements of the continents is not a possibility.
No it is true because that many meteor strikes and volcanoes around the time of the flood would have extinguished life on earth. It has nothing to do with whether they are random on not.Thank you, if you accept the catastrophic evidence you are one step closer.
The catastrophic evidence IS the evidence of a global flood when it is found on a mountain peak as in the picture in the starting post on this thread.
This of course is only true if the meteor striks are random.
But we have had encounters with many large objects in the 4.5 billion years of earth's existence and there have been many massive lava flows and super volcanoes in the last billion years. It is trying to cram all this into a young earth framework that causes the problem for the YEC myth.If we had an encounter with one large object which either broke up or was composed of several objects to begin with then a global flood and iceages are a expected result.
Frumious Bandersnatch said:Actually there have been many ice ages during the last billion years of earth's history providing yet another falsification of your young earth mythology.
You only think the base assumptions can't be true because they falsify your myth. The evidence for multiple ice ages over many million of years is overwhelming and YEC attempts to argue against them are easily seen to be seriously flawed.Indeed they are not.
As soon as one looks at the base assumptions and realizes that the base assumptions can not be true it is understandable why the accepted dates are questioned by well informed intelligent people.
If the shoe fits....It is not my intent to say the much of what is given is not good information, however we must be careful not to forget how we have arrived to a specific conclusion and not deem the theory as some kind of inspired unchangeable truth.
To do so would define one as a religious fanatic which unfortunately neither side of the argument is immune to.
Thanks. I have been studying these issues for about 20 years and I think I pretty well up on the "mainstream" YEC claims and their multiple flaws. My Ph.D. is not in geology or paleontology but I have spent quite a bit of time studying those subjects as well.I must complement you on your reasoning.
It both challenging and enjoyable.
Duane
Have fun camping. I will be at a research conference for the next week so my posting time will be limited as well.
FB
Upvote
0