Frumious Bandersnatch said:
I was referring to the inability of so-called "flood geologists" or "creation scientists" to specifically identify which layers were deposited by the flood. I have seen the "end of the flood layers" placed from the Cambrian to early Pleistocene for example. If there really had been a global flood a few thousand years ago I would think the evidence would be clear enough to determine what it deposited and what it didn't. Of course since no layers were deposited by global flood it is no surprise that there is no agreement among YECs. You can't identify something that doesn't exist.
I am of course have not had time to research the topic of geological conditions assuming a catastrophic and non-catastrophic ideas completely, but I can give an overview of what I have found so far.
Your conclusion is based on the assumption that the geologic column must be piled in a chronologically like a deck of cards.
In a flood condition the deck of cards are spread across a table sometimes a card or a few cards are on top of one another sometimes they do not connect at all.
Now you may say the you have a location which has a representation of all the cards and indeed in some cases this would be expected because a catastrophic condition will of course create many conditions and if you search long enough you will find a great many cards piled on top of one another.
Because you are defining what the geological column is you may conform it as you wish.
Selecting several sites that best fit your ideas and then selecting key fossils which best collaborate your theory a close match is found.
If something is found out of order at a later date all you would have to do is assume the species did not go extinct as previously thought or existed previously.
Eventually the most prominent anomalies can be accounted for and eliminated by modifications to the column.
New data will of course constantly be used to modify the column so your theory will be a close match to the data.
Unique conditions can be overlooked as one must expect that not all conditions of formation can be known due to the loss of information with passage of time.
Your conclusions will always of course prove your base assumptions true which is the goal of a theory.
If a flood theory is used the amount of radio active trace elements depend on the speed of the event and the original age of the material (and content of the trace elements in that material) used so trace elements would not indicate age necessarily but also a condition of formation.
Your proposed geological column is meaningless as the portion caused by the flood would not indicate a time period necessarily but a condition at the time of formation.
Because a flood would be a flood in Africa as well as America similar layers would be found. Which would be due to habitat elevation mobility intelligence density propensity to bloat and many other factors which I am not aware of.
Any major flood before or after a world flood could produce similar results to a smaller scale of course.
So the catastrophic geologist examines the data and looks for a deck of cards spread across the table with a few cards that overlap and some that do not connect at all.
When you say Hay I found the geologic column here at these places that are 1% of the planet I have to ask what about the other 99% that supports a spread deck of cards idea.
Well you may say I should not expect no erosion at all and most places will not have all the layers after all this happened over millions of years.
I would reply, it did not happen over millions of years and the so called missing layers most often were never there.
So you see the two theories can not be judged by the other theories assumptions.
You can not prove the catastrophic theory wrong using a geological column which assumes a non catastrophic condition.
Before you judge me to harshly on the last statement consider your reaction if I said that evolution could not have occurred because life has existed only 6000 years and there was not enough time for the process to happen.
You would say Hay, you cant apply your assumptions to my theory I dont accept your assumptions.
Likewise I can not accept your assumption when considering a catastrophic condition but must judge the theory based on how well it fits the evidence being consistent with its own base assumptions.
I will attempt to keep you updated as I inform myself on the subject but details will have to wait until I finish researching both sides of the argument.
Frumious Bandersnatch said:
I thought they were either slaves in Egypt or wandering around lost in the desert or wiping out the people they ran into. Could you provide some documentation of the 450 wooden boat they built to journey to the Americas?
In this site the Ten Commandments were found on a rock in New Mexico.
http://www.ancient-hebrew.org/15_home.html
This is a site quote...
"The above inscription cannot be a fake for the following reasons. The actual time of discovery of the inscription is not known but was known by the locals as far back as the 1850's. At that time, the script of the text was unknown and therefore undecipherable. It was not until this last century that the ancient Hebrew (paleo-Hebrew) script was discovered in the Near East. Once this ancient script was discovered the Los Lunas inscription could be deciphered and was found to be a copy of the "Ten Commandments".
So there was travel between the Americas and Egypt about the time of Moses 900 years after the flood.
The script was the original most early language placing it close to the creation of the text and can be no earlier then the ten commandments were given.
Would you care to make a bold assertion that they didnt take animals with them now that we know they made the trip?
The Jews were not the most technically advanced people of the day.
Frumious Bandersnatch said:
So if I post sites on geology, biogeography and the fossil record that have data that clearly falsify YEC but are not anti-YEC sites will you accept it. You should realize that every site, book or paper on these subjects that is not specifically produced by YEC sworn to uphold the YEC agenda will be loaded with data totally incomparable with YEC.
My opnion is not a majority opnion and so most sites disagree with me, but I have found data is neutral and so I use sites that disagree with me all the time.
You have read my posts for a while so I assume you realize that and do not require an example, but if you wish to see an example or two ( from this thread ) I would be willing to provide it, just ask.
Before you give evolution based evidence, understand that it is not necessary for the catastrophic theory to comply with the evolutionary geological column theory but only that the raw data complies with catastrophic conditions predicted.
Frumious Bandersnatch said:
I read YEC sites and anti YEC sites but I spend most of my time studying science. All science sites with data on cosmology, paleontology, geology, biogeography, archeology, paleoclimate studies, are essentially anti YEC even though they just exist to present their data and never even think about or mention YEC.
Try reading about the meteor impact record and the conditions it is required to cause.
If the meteor impact record is not random then the amount of energy released at one time would cause the equivalent of a nuclear winter.
The geological record must place the event at the ice ages causing the accepted dates of Earths history to be in error.
The next question of course is does the flood theory match the geological record on the majority of the Earth and I believe it does.
The fact that there is not a balance of information is due to the lack of effort given for one theory when compared to another.
It is not fair to criticize the theory for this condition.
Frumious Bandersnatch said:
If You don't understand why humans didn't deliver kangaroos, tree kangaroos, playtypus, bush tailed possums, echinda, marsupial moles, Antechinus(marsupial mice), planigales, bilbies, wallabies, koalas, wombats, numbats, sugar gliders, dunnarts, ninauis, tasmanian tigers, tasmanian devils, phascogales, bandicoots, quols, potoroos and bettongs and others of the 180 species of Australian marsupials and the Australian flightless birds
before European showed up there then your statement above about accepting sound reasoning and logical analysis is not true.
Please note that you are applying evolution base assumptions here which would not necessary be true in a catastrophic theory. It is similar to dividing by zero in mathematics and all logical rules which are implemented afterward are void.
Please bear with me as I study the subject in an effort to determine base assumptions for a catastrophic geological condition.
Frumious Bandersnatch said:
That is not what I am saying. Geologists knew the earth was ancient long before radiometric dating methods. If you want to know how they work read Radiometric Dating: A Christian Perspective.
I do not disagree that the theory has existed for a long time or that there are have been many combinations of beliefs regarding religion and the origin of the Earth.
Frumious Bandersnatch said:
Totally wrong. The Colorado river formed the Grand Canyon. At times over the last 700,000 years the river was temporarily blocked by lava flows causing water to accumulate. When the lava dams broke erosion was temporarily must faster than average. This is far different than the YECs imaginary global flood and imaginary lakes.
My point was that a consistent condition can not have formed the grand canyon.
The only question that remains is, how catastrophic was it?
Frumious Bandersnatch said:
Hmm. I think that the average emporer penguin is much heavier than the average triolobite was. How about you? Do you think the bacteria that formed the stomatolite fossils found in the precambrian were even heavier than trilobites? How about modern clams that grow attached to the bottom? Why did the get buried above the trilobites?
It is not just a function of weight location and many more conditions, yes even chance.
The catastrophic model allows non-catastrophic conditions also just as the evolutionary models allow catastrophic conditions.
This is fair for both theories.
Frumious Bandersnatch said:
In my experience whenever YECs get specific with there models they find them quickly falsified. Have fun.
Ha. Ha, well I havent gone under yet.
Wish me luck.
Duane