So are you saying that Africa and North America were separate continents before the flood? What is your explanation for Biogeography?duordi said:Why would I expect a global flood to take animals from Africa and form fossils in North America.
Not necessarily. Are you saying that all or nearly all fossils formed during the global flood? Does that mean that all the world's geological layers including those with extensive salt deposits and trace fossils that show animals going about their daily buisness as if nothing special were happening were formed by the global flood?Fossils only form when something is quick buried.
Except for those with hard shells or those that sink to the bottom of eutrophic lakes or are preserved by other means and of course rapid burial doesn't mean a global flood. The same creationists who claim that the fossil record couldn't have formed even in hundreds of millions of years without the global flood also claim that a significant portion of the fossil record was deposited pre and post flood, though they will never say which portion. Still, to say something could not have formed in a hundreds of millions of years but that a significant portion of it formed in a few thousand is more than a little inconsistent, wouldn't you say?Things that float around for awhile would not make fossils but be digested by bacteria and erosion or sink.
The point is that all over the world there are fossils of specific organisms in specific layers. Speaking of Africa the Karoo formation has the fossils of millions or maybe billions of Permian animals and above them some Triassic organisms ( after a gap) but no post Triassic Dinosaurs or mammals. How did that happen? The Morrison formation has Jurassic dinosaurs but no Eocene or later mammals even though the fossils of Oligocene, Miocene and Pleistocene mammals are abundant.Besides, if you found something that doesnt life there now you would say it was indigenous at one time, would you not?
Speaking of mammals here is a list of extinct and extant mammals from Glen Morton
On the genus level the numbers of members of extant mammalian genera in the various geological epochs is:
oldest
Triassic there are 4 genera--no living members
Jurassic 43 genera-no living members
Cretaceous 36 genera-no living members
Paleocene 213 genera-no living members
Eocene 569 genera-3 extant genera
Oligocene 494 genera 11 extant genera
Miocene 749 genera 57 extant genera
Pliocene 762 genera 133 extant genera
Pleistocene 830 genera 417 extant genera
youngest
Can you explain why animals that were buried deeper by the flood went extinct post flood while more of those that were buried as deep remained with us? What is the flood based interpretation of these and the other data on Glenn's web page? Is there one that makes any sense?
There is simply no way that any signficant portion of either the world's geology or fossil record could have been formed by a global flood. Given that fact along with so many other Falsifications of the Global flood. The only logical conclusion is that the story of the flood of Noah is based on a local and not a global flood.
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