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Doesn't matter how long it took
If the geological strata creationists ascribe to the flood really were caused by the flood then there should be no evidence of life anywhere in these strata apart from the very bottom and the very top.
The problem is, signs of life going on are found all the way through the strata.
If this is the case, and a global flood explains all of geology, then why don't you describe how a global flood model accounts for the numerous shallow-water bioherms found throughout the rock record? I listed a few examples in this post, and when you later replied to it, you conveniently left out the reply to the bioherms. Explain them now, using your flood model. Include a techinical explanation of why the bioherms better fit your model than the models advanced by modern geologists.1 yes they do but it cannot be understood and makes no sense using an old earth paradigm - see link below on flood geology
A creation event should not come into play here. By your own theory, the entirety of the biosphere should have been mixed up by the flood waters, yet we see a progression of ecology that cannot be explained by hydraulic sorting, which is the dominant process when rapid water movement is in play, as it would be in a tumultuous flood.2 yes they do but it requires a Creator and a creation event and not evolution caused by random mutations and unknown naturalistic mechanisms
This is my favorite part of your post, because it truly displays the contortions necessary to make flood geology sound plausible. Unfortunately he's convincing to the untrained eye.
Why don't you pick your two favorite arguments and present them to us, providing both the flood and classical geology explanations, detailing why the flood explanation is more accurate than the other.4 global flooding would cause many things to occur that cannot be explained by old earth / slow deposition models
Flood geology - CreationWiki, the encyclopedia of creation science
I have asked you repeatedly to detail these 'unproveable assumptions', but you have yet to do so. Do it now.5 radiometric dating is the brainchild of old earthers who have used unproveable assumptions as it's foundation and they fudge the numbers to get what they want
Are not YET understood. How this helps your case, I do not know. Care to elaborate?paleomagnetic reversals are not understood by old earthers or young earthers
False. Most flood advocates state that most or all of the sedimentary record was deposited during the flood year. Thus, the many, many kilometers of sediments are all from the same year. So it's not about the TIME, it's about the thickness of the strata. Let's say that 5km of sediments are deposited in one location during the 'flood year' (which isn't that much, considering there are 20+ km of sediments in some regions). Each day of the flood year would be represented by 13.7 meters of sediment (5000m/365 days) now are you telling me that we shouldn't be able to pinpoint a specific event when over 40 feet of sediment are deposited daily? Nonsense.These 2 statements contradict. Since the flood only lasted a year, you have to explain how you're going to be able to pinpoint anything that exactly.
The maths disagree with you. The sedimentary record disagrees with you. If you've got evidence outside your own personal incredulity, please present it. Otherwise, keep your nonsense.Good luck. Basically, what you're demanding, is ridiculous. You're not going to "find no evidence of life anywhere, in the space of a year. And you should not need me to tell you this! It strongly suggests that instead of thinking this through, you've prepared for tests. (That is what the system is designed for, after all)
Well since 'above' has been shown to be blatantly ridiculous, then yes, a problem. See, this is where you young earthers screw up. Even YOU GUYS are incredulous about being able to resolve a year: You can't even stick to your own paradigms! If the flood year was so important and deposited so much sediment, it should be no problem at all to recognize specific days, weeks, months within that year. But even you can't believe that. Hello, irony.Not a problem at all, per above.
You could have every year out of 20 being "lifeless," and you'd never know. (Ok, maybe that exaggeration isn't true, but you see the point that the flood is claim is only 1 year total, ever.)
False. Most flood advocates state that most or all of the sedimentary record was deposited during the flood year. over 40 feet of sediment are deposited daily?
Layers left by tsunami, local floods, volcanoes, asteroid impacts can be identified and they don't exactly last that long.These 2 statements contradict. Since the flood only lasted a year, you have to explain how you're going to be able to pinpoint anything that exactly.
It isn't the length of time it took that is the issue but the uniqueness of the process and amount of material laid down. If the layers laid down by the flood can be many miles thick as creationists claim then it doesn't matter how long it took. Unless you are abandoning the claim that the flood laid down miles of sedimentary rock.Good luck. Basically, what you're demanding, is ridiculous. You're not going to "find no evidence of life anywhere, in the space of a year. And you should not need me to tell you this! It strongly suggests that instead of thinking this through, you've prepared for tests. (That is what the system is designed for, after all)
So the flood only laid down a single year's worth of sediment indistinguishable from any other layer of sediment in the geological column? You are rejecting an awful lot of creationism there Raze. But it still leaves you with a lot of questions to answer. The reason creation science is so passionately committed to a global flood is because it needs the flood to explain the geology. Where do all the layers of sedimentary rock many miles thick came from? How were they all laid down in a few thousand years? Or did God create the sedimentary rock complete with fossils?Not a problem at all, per above. You could have every year out of 20 being "lifeless," and you'd never know. (Ok, maybe that exaggeration isn't true, but you see the point that the flood is claim is only 1 year total, ever.)
Bookmarked. ThanksIn his first example, Dr. (of engineering, not geology) Tas presents a paleosol from Missouri. Only one picture of the paleosol is provided, and it is both distant and grainy. Nevertheless, Tas does a decent job of describing the paleosol for the reader. While we will take his description at face value for the time being, it is poor form to provide just one poor picture of an outcrop when small scale features are key to proper diagnosis. In fact, there is no indication that Tas has even been to the outcrop in question...
Let's look back a bit. You joined in my discussion with kalkyree, he was arguing for a young earth and vast layers of geological strata laid down by the flood. I showing him the problem with young earth creationist flood geology. Although your response was worded as though you disagreed with me, you were in fact agreeing. The geological evidence does not support the young earth flood geology, the flood did not lay down vast layers of sedimentary rock, it is not responsible for fossil fuels, fossil trees, the vast beds of fossils were not laid down in the flood, nor were they killed by the flood.I find it interesting that you present as fact that I'm a young earther (I'm not) and that the flood deposited 40 feet of sediment a day. (I don't see how that could be established, even if it might be what a school is advocating)
What song did the strawman sing? You're smarter than this.
My sincerest apologies. "Flood advocate" would have been more appropriate.I find it interesting that you present as fact that I'm a young earther (I'm not)
It is a simple mathematical extrapolation based on a subdued thickness for the sedimentary column. Were my maths wrong? Was I wrong in noting that many flood advocates say the sedimentary column was deposited in a year? If not, whats the problem?and that the flood deposited 40 feet of sediment a day. (I don't see how that could be established, even if it might be what a school is advocating)
Not really.What song did the strawman sing? You're smarter than this.![]()
We are talking about organisms that MUST have evolved at a rate of growth and survival that is greater than the organisms that became extinct. That means that those organisms had to experience birth, growth, and allelic change on the same level as the ones that became extinct with the rate of evolution from one type of organism into another at a greater rate than that which killed off those nature did not 'select'.
Secondly, if the neo-Darwinians claim a list of organisms that have changed on only the species level(minor changes) then they are cheating.
Why is there a definite empirical list of extinctions but no such list of newly evolved organsms?
Well ... it doesn't have to take long. In terms of the lifetime of an individual, yes, the time of speciation is "long". But in geological terms speciation is very short. In the laboratory new species have been generated in as few as 60 generations:Neo-Darwinists tell us that it takes so very long........for an organism to evolve and branch off into other organisms. But that very argument establishes our case for extinction.
So you are using the Argument from Authority. Not good. Kirkwhisper, Sanford is just wrong by the only criteria that matter: the data. It would appear that Sanford has 1) distorted some of the data, 2) ignored much of the data and 3) just lied about some of the data.But let the critics call Dr. Sanford 'ignorant' or unqualified to speak on this subject as they have suggested that I am.Right.
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Actually, most of them don't. Richard Andre did a comprehensive collection of myths about the floods. It was Die Flutsagen: Ehnthographisch Btrachtet, 1891. Andre had nearly 90 deluge traditions. Of these, 26 arose from the Babylonian story and 43 were independent. He noted a lack of deluge traditions in Arabia, Japan, northern and central Asia, Africa, and much of Europe. He concluded that not everyone had descended from survivors of a single deluge, otherwise the traditions would all have been much more identical and there would be deluge traditions in every society instead of a minority.yet most ancient histories from all over the world talk about a Great Flood.
My sincerest apologies. "Flood advocate" would have been more appropriate.
It is a simple mathematical extrapolation based on a subdued thickness for the sedimentary column. Were my maths wrong?
Was I wrong in noting that many flood advocates say the sedimentary column was deposited in a year?
Creationists do not need geology to believe the Flood happened (the Word of God does that) but the sedimentary nature of the geology sure confirms what they already know as truth.So the flood only laid down a single year's worth of sediment indistinguishable from any other layer of sediment in the geological column? You are rejecting an awful lot of creationism there Raze. But it still leaves you with a lot of questions to answer. The reason creation science is so passionately committed to a global flood is because it needs the flood to explain the geology. Where do all the layers of sedimentary rock many miles thick came from? How were they all laid down in a few thousand years? Or did God create the sedimentary rock complete with fossils?
Not an assumption, I told you how it has been verified by radiometric dating
radiometric dating is full of unproveable assumptions!
What about your assumptions, that continental drift moved much much faster in the past, that radioactive decay was much much faster in the past, and that for some reason these two separate processes matched each others rates of change?
it is another possible model - also w assumptons yes
both models have assumptions
which model fits the data better?
to know you have to investigate both - not just one
That is a pity, because these earlier supercontinents are the only evidence we have that that plate tectonics moved a bit faster in the past. Of course the evidence we have for supercontinents like Ur, Kendorland and Rodinia are the same evidence we have for Pangaea, matching rocks found far apart that can be linked back through a series of supercontinent breakups.
series of break-ups? - maybe or maybe not
No someone else told me (another way of saying I keep up to date with science) because the data fits their model. We can measure the rate the Atlantic is widening, we know how wide it is so it isn't a great leap to calculate how long it took at that rate. We can also use radiometric dating to find the age of the rocks formed when the split occurred. How old are the highest layers of rock found both in America and Europe. The ages match.
We don't know how fast the Atlantic Ocean opened up and we don't know if radiometric dating is accurate because we don't know if the decay rates have been constant for 4.5 billion years!! - so you are taking two statements of unknown value and claiming them to be true - then you are making a third claim of unknown value from them!!No I am taking two independent dating methods and showing they agree. They confirm each other. That is how science works, finding different ways to test a hypotheses.
all radiometric dating methods share one unproveable assumption of a constant decay rate for elements and have other assumptions too
they are called assumptions because they cannot be proved
if they could be proved they would not be called assumptions
basic
Conspiracy theories and slander are always a great way to deny inconvenient evidence. The fact is, the rate the ocean crust has been moving over the hotspot matches the radiometric dating for 80 million years.
maybe - maybe not - depends which model you use and what assumptions you accept
your statement is not a fact - it's an idea that may or may not be true
it is a common technique to repeat statements often enough so people get used to hearing them and will accept them as fact ---- soon everyone forgets there were unproveable assumptions involved ---- doesn't make them all of sudden become fact!!!![]()
Doesn't matter how long it took, the issue is the quantity of sedimentary rock that is supposed to have been laid down in the flood. And creationist regularly claim that most of the sedimentary strata we see today are the result of the flood, (though they cannot be pinned down on which strata are supposed to mark the beginning and end of the flood). If the geological strata creationists ascribe to the flood really were caused by the flood then there should be no evidence of life anywhere in these strata apart from the very bottom and the very top.
The problem is, signs of life going on are found all the way through the strata. In fact the problem is so bad some creationists have abandoned searching for the flood in any of the layers you find fossils and shove the flood all the way back to the Hadean, 3.8 billion years ago in conventional dating. Which means they have abandoned any attempt to explain the vast layers of later sedimentary rock by the flood. It isn't just that the Grand canyon wasn't carve out by the flood, all the layers of sedimentary rock that make it up were deposited in the few thousand years after the flood.
If this is the case, and a global flood explains all of geology, then why don't you describe how a global flood model accounts for the numerous shallow-water bioherms found throughout the rock record? I listed a few examples in this post, and when you later replied to it, you conveniently left out the reply to the bioherms. Explain them now, using your flood model. Include a techinical explanation of why the bioherms better fit your model than the models advanced by modern geologists.
you've asked a lot of questions - i doubt you could or would keep up if someone else was asking so many questions of you
you haven't answered all of mine either
the pre-flood seas were shallow - the earth's crust had not broken up into tectonic plates yet
a global flood accompanied by great tectonic upheavals which included the opening up a new ocean (Atlantic) would certainly break up coral reefs and at the later stages could deposit them at the convergent margins of continents thru subduction - it doesn't need to be more technical than that
A creation event should not come into play here. By your own theory, the entirety of the biosphere should have been mixed up by the flood waters, yet we see a progression of ecology that cannot be explained by hydraulic sorting, which is the dominant process when rapid water movement is in play, as it would be in a tumultuous flood.
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why not? - sure it could see my previous post #95
The entire article is based on refuting the presence of paleosols throughout the rock record. Yet instead of providing a systematic reinterpretation of the features found in 'paleosols' and advancing a hypothesis that better explains the origins of these features, the author focuses on two particular locations, attempts to discount these locations as true paleosols, and then broadly applies this 'refutation' to the remainder of the rock record.
In his first example, Dr. (of engineering, not geology) Tas presents a paleosol from Missouri. Only one picture of the paleosol is provided, and it is both distant and grainy. Nevertheless, Tas does a decent job of describing the paleosol for the reader. While we will take his description at face value for the time being, it is poor form to provide just one poor picture of an outcrop when small scale features are key to proper diagnosis. In fact, there is no indication that Tas has even been to the outcrop in question.
Tas' first item of contention is that this paleosol does not contain root traces. Now, we know the age of the paleosol (don't freak out kids, I'm talking about the RELATIVE age, not the absolute age)-- it is, at youngest, Upper Cambrian since it is overlain by the Cambrian Lamotte Sandstone.
Here Tas displays either his dishonesty or his incompetence as a stratigrapher: He holds the lack of apparent root traces in the paleosol as the primary reason the deposit must not, in fact, be a paleosol. Now, far be it from me to accuse Tas of dishonesty, so for the time being, I'll give him the benefit of the doubt and just assume he's incompetent, and here's why: Every stratigrapher (or paleontologists, or evolutionary biologist, for that matter) worth his salt knows, both from personal observation and from studying the literature, the there were no rooting plants in the Cambrian (SOURCE, SOURCE). Thus, it is IMPOSSIBLE for a Cambrian paleosol to contain root traces.
The remainder of Tas' argument relies on his own interpretation of the photograph, in which he goes into rather graphic detail, even though he had already said that "it is not possible to positively identify rocks from a photo at such a distance. One cant clearly see minerals or textures, or easily discriminate between rock, lichen, mould and shadow." Yet, later on, he goes into fantastic detail both in describing and interpreting the upper sandstone in the picture. Incompetence or dishonesty? You decide. Anyway, based on his own previous claim (with which I agree), the remainder of his argument can be thrown out as speculation.
Now then. On to example #2, Oligocene paleosols developed atop individual basalt flows. In this case, we aren't even presented a photograph- all we have to go on is a line drawing and Tas' word. That's not how I do geology, but then, who am I? Not a doctor of engineering, just a geologist. So since all we have to go on is what he tells us, there's no avenue for independent verification, punting his explanations from the realm of science directly into the land of storytelling. But anyway, there are at least a few of his claims that we can address without a photograph.
The first is the claim that the basalts were deposited subaqueously. Subaqueous basalts tend to form what are called 'pillow lavas.' As Tas doesn't verify his assertion by indicating the presence of pillows in the basalt layers, we can confidently assume that he is either incorrect or too incompetent to realize this is an important criterion.
Second, he claims that the basalts and paleosols should follow the trends of the 'hilly' Mapelton-Maleny plateau, completely ignoring the law of original horizontality. Incompetence or disohnesty? I wonder.
Tell you what: I'm going bowling, but when I'm done, we'll compare and contrast the qualities of modern soils and paleosols, and then we'll decide together if they're similar. Deal? Deal.
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I have asked you repeatedly to detail these 'unproveable assumptions', but you have yet to do so. Do it now.
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Why don't you pick your two favorite arguments and present them to us, providing both the flood and classical geology explanations, detailing why the flood explanation is more accurate than the other.
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Unfortunately the geology doesn't confirm a global flood. there is nowhere in the geological strata that marks the beginning of the flood or the end of it, but through out the strata we find, not just dead animals, but signs of life, nests, roots, burrow, footprints, as well as soil formation and sand dunes which you would hardly get in the middle of a flood. The only alternative is as Raze does, deny the flood left any identifiable evidence. But then you really need to go for Old Earth Creationism to have time for natural processes before and after the flood to form the miles and miles of sedimentary strata. Or else claim God created all the rock complete with fossils.Creationists do not need geology to believe the Flood happened (the Word of God does that) but the sedimentary nature of the geology sure confirms what they already know as truth.