Remus
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- Feb 22, 2004
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This was not your original argument.Vance said:Oh, no, I think that varves falsify both a recent global flood AND a young earth.
I'm not so sure it would be "very different". I would expect the runoff to be rather fast and not some slow drainage.But what do you mean by "run-off", exactly? If you have a body of water, then a global flood, that body of water will be subsumed in the greater "body of water" and then entire "basin" will be filled with the new mixture. Then the waters recede, and the orginal basin is still there, and it would still be full of water, just a very different mixture of water.
Yes, some have proposed this, but I don't see why you would expect me to consider that or defend it if I don't necessarily believe it to be the case. If you want to debate what others say, then perhaps you should talk to them instead of me.Now, the first problem is that the "flood geology" promoted by Creationists has included MAJOR topographical changes, including the raising of mountains, etc, so we would wonder why there would still be a basin there to collect more layers.
I've said this many times now and I'm beginning to wonder if you are reading what I'm saying. I don't believe that they are pristine layers that are exactly alike throughout. This is something that has yet to be established.But, assuming that this particular formation (and every other one in which varves are found) escaped the topographical transformations, we would then have a basin still collecting annual run off as if nothing had happened, but for the flood year, we would have a dramatically different mixture of water in the basin. Why would it be that this event would both leave all the earlier layers in place and create a new layer that looks very much the same? The same sediment type, the same general thickness, etc. Wouldn't that be a major coincidence?
What do you mean by "significant"?In fact, once the waters receded, there would be this new mixture of water there for a long time. How long would it take for the salty, mineral laden mixture to be replaced with the freshwater glacier run off? Today those lakes are pure freshwater runoff. How would that happen without leaving a significant trace behind?
No, I just have to make a case for a possible solution that refutes your original argument. I really don't have to convince anyone.Oh, and I am not really the one you would have to convince, but all those geologists who know exactly what would likely happen and why.
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