Tamino
Active Member
You don't get it. There's an entire discipline of science working on this stuff. Geologists have mapped out layers and formations all over the world and built up detailed models of how those layers formed over a period of millions of years.The flood lasted many days and it has different water sources, the rain and the flooding water from the "fountains of the great deep". Rain would have done different layers, depending on the place and what materials there were. And the water from the fountains carried different materials and its effect was probably more dramatic, because it was more powerful. The water from below would also probably have had many minerals in it to cause different layers.
And, by what is said in the Bible, in the beginning earth was covered with dust. I don't know what exactly it was, but what would have been carried away from the fault line of the original continent, for example Mid-Atlantic ridge, cleaning the are that is now for example the bottom of Atlantic ocean. By what we can see from the result, the conclusion is, earth (=dry land) was not homogeneous before the flood.
If you want to overturn that model, you need a bit more than "The water from below would also probably have had many minerals in it"
You would need maps. Where are your proposed "fountains of the deep"? Which layers do they form an why? Which layers are from rain erosion?
You cannot just overthrow a detailed and well-established model with some hand-waving and "it could have been different", that's not how science works. You need to present your own model. Every single layer of stone and every single fold and movement that is explained by the current theory, requires an alternative and plausible explanation in your model.
No. Very specific birds can live on open water. The majority cannot.Eaten by water animals, and birds that can live on water.
Wait, you don't even have a model on where to fit your flood idea in the fossil record??It may be that dinosaurs had died before the flood already.
Evidence, please?But, on basis of their structure, I would think they would not float when dead.
In that case, we would find colibris, small songbirds and flightless birds in lower layers of the fossil record, because they either cannot fly, or they cannot fly for long durations. And we would find migratory birds and sea birds in upper layers or not at all because they can survive longer above an ocean. There is no such evidence in the fossil record. You are still trying to pull solutions out of your sleeve without even thinking it through.And many birds could have drowned, but because they normally can fly, they would not get as easily stuck into the sediments. They would fly some time and drop to water and sink.
Yeah, those water animals.... I was going to ask... How are those going to survive the sudden and radical changes in their habitat? All those minerals and materials that your "fountains of the deep", wouldn't they alter the acidity, salinity and mineral content of the sea water? Water layers would mix, currents and temperatures would change, the fresh water fish would almost all of them die as soon as the fresh water sources are mixed in with the oceans...But at that point there would not be much material coming to cover them and make them fossils. They would sink to the bottom of the ocean floor, where they would be eaten by all kind of water animals.
"Almost a year" is extremely rapid movement in geological terms.Why do you think they moved rapidly across the earth?
I think Bible suggests that the original continent was broken and sunk down. And it was relatively slow process, almost a year, because the water below it made it softer.
Do you have any clue how limestone forms? Your "dust" idea doesn't account at all for the vast amounts of biogenic limestone.Many vast limestone formations were likely from the dust that covered the earth in the beginning and were carried by the flooding water to current places.