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Author Topic:   Did the Flood really happen?
Percy
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Posts: 22499
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 4.9


(1)
Message 1501 of 2370 (869351)
12-29-2019 8:47 AM
Reply to: Message 1499 by Faith
12-29-2019 3:50 AM


Re: Depositions, and Lake Bonneville don’t show Flood Geology
Faith writes:
The Flood explains pretty much everything, where Geology is klutzy and incompetent, and the fossil order is some kind of odd illusion especially since no creature could have evolved from the others. Again, there is absolutely no way the strata as they exist as the Geological Column, spreading across thousands of square miles, could ever have come about if they represent time periods. It is a physical impossibility but that is something you deny.
Translation into the fact-based world:
Geology explains a great deal, while the Flood is ad hoc and impossible. The fossil order is one of the clearest examples of its problems as well as a record of evolution over time. The geological column could not have been formed by a global flood, nor any sequence of floods. The strata across the Earth vary in extent from mere feet to thousands of square miles, and contain a record of radiometric age that adds to what were once mere names given to time periods. Given all the contrary evidence and the physical impossibilities, the Flood is just a religious myth that some continue to cling to as if real.
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 1499 by Faith, posted 12-29-2019 3:50 AM Faith has not replied

  
RAZD
Member (Idle past 1432 days)
Posts: 20714
From: the other end of the sidewalk
Joined: 03-14-2004


Message 1502 of 2370 (869354)
12-29-2019 11:10 AM
Reply to: Message 1497 by Faith
12-28-2019 10:06 PM


Re: Depositions, and Lake Bonneville DON'T show Flood Geology PT1
This is the sort of thing establishment Geology says that is just nonsense. ...
You know that just claiming this without actually showing it is what typifies actual nonsense.
... Geology likes multiple events for some reason. ...
The evidence -- the details -- show multiple events, geologists just report what the evidence actually shows, not what someone wishes it showed. It's called honesty.
... Here multiple re-formations of Lake Bonneville. ...
And of the other pluvial lakes that were formed from glacial melting. Yes there was flooding and yes there was runoff/overflow/outflow from those lakes at different times, reoccurring as the glaciers continued to melt and retreat. But no flooding occurred above the glacier carved mountain sides or covered more than localized areas.
The scabland is another case of glacial melt flooding and erosion. We have discussed this area before in regards to what such erosion shows vs what we see in the Grand Canyon (which is not due to glacial melt overflows or world wide mythical floods ... because the details show a different erosion pattern due to typical river and wind erosion patterns ... but this is not a Grand Canyon thread).
quote:
The Channeled Scablands at one time were a relatively barren and soil-free region of interconnected relict and dry flood channels, coulees and cataracts eroded into Palouse loess and the typically flat-lying basalt flows that remain after cataclysmic floods within the southeastern part of the U.S. state of Washington.[1][2] The channeled scablands were scoured by more than 40 cataclysmic floods during the Last Glacial Maximum and innumerable older cataclysmic floods over the last two million years.[3][4][5] These cataclysmic floods were repeatedly unleashed when a large glacial lake repeatedly drained and swept across eastern Washington and down the Columbia River Plateau during the Pleistocene epoch. The last of the cataclysmic floods occurred between 18,200 and 14,000 years ago.[6]
So there is plenty of evidence of localized flooding even of cataclysmic proportions in this one area, but the detailed evidence shows it comes from glaciers, not mythic floods, that it occurs multiple (40+) times ...
And there is more:
quote:
Geology
Distinct geomorphological features include coulees, dry falls, streamlined hills and islands of remnant loess, gravel fans and bars, and giant current ripples.[7]
The term scabland refers to an area that has experienced fluvial erosion resulting in the loss of loess and other soils, leaving the land barren.[9] River valleys formed by erosional downcutting of rivers create V-shaped valleys, while glaciers carve out U-shaped valleys. The Channeled Scablands have a rectangular cross section, with flat plateaus and steep canyon sides, and are spread over immense areas of eastern Washington. The morphology of the scablands is butte-and-basin.[9] The area that encompasses the Scablands has been estimated between 1,500 and 2,000 square miles (3,900 and 5,200 km2), though those estimates still may be too conservative.[10]
They exhibit a unique drainage pattern that appears to have an entrance in the northeast and an exit in the southwest. The Cordilleran Ice Sheet dammed up Glacial Lake Missoula at the Purcell Trench Lobe.[10] A series of floods occurring over the period of 18,000 to 13,000 years ago swept over the landscape when the ice dam broke. The eroded channels also show an anastomosing, or braided, appearance.
The presence of Middle and Early Pleistocene Missoula flood deposits have been documented within the Channeled Scabland as other parts of the Columbia Basin, e.g. the Othello Channels, Columbia River Gorge, Quincy Basin, Pasco Basin, and the Walla Walla Valley. Based on the presence of multiple interglacial calcretes interbedded with glaciofluvial flood deposits, magnetostratigraphy, optically stimulated luminescence dating, and unconformity truncated clastic dikes, it has been estimated that the oldest of these megafloods flowed through the Channel Scablands sometime before 1.5 million years ago. Because of the fragmentary nature of older glaciofluvial deposits, which have been largely removed by subsequent Missoula floods, the exact number of older Missoula floods, which are known as Ancient Cataclysmic Floods, that occurred during the Pleistocene cannot be estimated with any confidence.[3][4] As many as 100 separate, cataclysmic Ice Age floods may have occurred during the last glaciation.[11] There have been at least 17 complete interglacial-glacial cycles since about 1.77 million years ago, and perhaps as many as 44 interglacial-glacial cycles since the beginning of the Pleistocene about 2.58 million years ago. Presuming a dozen (or more) floods were associated with each glaciation, the total number of cataclysmic Ice Age Missoula floods that flowed through the Channeled Scablands for the entire Pleistocene Epoch could possibly number in the hundreds, perhaps exceeding a thousand Ancient Cataclysmic Floods.[5]
There's those pesky details again. Now we have "As many as 100 separate, cataclysmic Ice Age floods" for you to explain with a single imaginary flood. Cue the denial machine ...
And don't forget the relative timing:
  1. mountains formed
  2. ice age occurred, ice sheets covered vast areas
  3. glaciers carved into the mountains (making lots of sand and gravel)
  4. climate changed, ice started melting
  5. melting waters formed large lakes between the glaciers and their moraines left by their furthest advance/s.
  6. lakes overflowed or cut through the ice/moraine dams releasing massive amounts of water
  7. the released waters caused cataclysmic erosion downstream
  8. repeat from step 5 several times as glaciers continue to melt and retreat
  9. ends when glaciers are gone or stop large scale melting (gosh ... melting like we are seeing now in Greenland ... )
... Multiple transgressions and regressions for instance where I see one gigantic Flood. Multiple ice ages for instance where I see one that started with the Flood and is now finally near its end. ...
Only by ignoring the details that show hard evidence of multiple occurrences. Ignoring evidence doesn't make your fantasy real, it just makes it a fantasy propped up by denial.
... However, there is nothing at all about salt flats confined within the borders of the Bonneville ex-lake that could ever have contributed to the Geological Column.
And AGAIN you missed the point that the bottom is very very flat, with a winter lake 1" deep over 40 sq miles, and this refutes your claim about lakes not having flat bottoms, which is part of your fantasy about some overall geological column that does not in fact exist. See Message 1495 for details.
You know I think standard timing of ancient events is a crock. On the Flood model the lake would have been water left in a confined area after the main Flood water had drained away. Some time later whatever had dammed it up released it, most likely caused by the continuing tectonic activity that had begun at the end of the Flood.
Yes, I know that you have nothing but denial of the evidence in Age Correlations and An Old Earth, Version 2 No 1 that shows any fantasy of a young earth is contradicted by annual evidence of tree rings, lake varves, marine varves, ice cores, etc etc etc
Once again, it is the details, Faith, that trip you up and make your concept/s fall flat on it's face.
The giant lakes are one of the things that are easy to explain as post-Flood phenomena, as I already said.
But not their multiple forming and vanishing and forming and vanishing 28 times. Just saying it only occurred once is ignoring the details in the evidence that show multiple formations. Fail.
I'm going to break this here as this is long enough.
Enjoy
Edited by RAZD, : .
Edited by Admin, : Fix italic dBCode.

we are limited in our ability to understand
by our ability to understand
RebelAmericanZenDeist
... to learn ... to think ... to live ... to laugh ...
to share.


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This message is a reply to:
 Message 1497 by Faith, posted 12-28-2019 10:06 PM Faith has not replied

  
RAZD
Member (Idle past 1432 days)
Posts: 20714
From: the other end of the sidewalk
Joined: 03-14-2004


Message 1503 of 2370 (869356)
12-29-2019 11:50 AM
Reply to: Message 1497 by Faith
12-28-2019 10:06 PM


Re: Depositions, and Lake Bonneville DON'T show Flood Geology PT2
Continuing from Message 1502, Re: Depositions, and Lake Bonneville DON'T show Flood Geology PT1
It is truly amazing how far people can get elaborating such an untruth. ...
It is truly amazing how far people (you) can get elaborating such an untruth. You need to stop calling people liars just because they don't say only what you want to hear.
You asked for an honest poster, but you can't deal with honestly presented evidence that contradicts your fantasies.
... We probably COULD learn a lot about the climate if it were recognized that all these phenomena point to a worldwide Flood about 4300 years ago. But if you have a false idea of the past you're going to get it all wrong.
Which is why it is imperative to rid ourselves of the worldwide flood nonsense fantasy and focus on the actual evidence of reality.
And you are certainly wrong that such bodies of water have anything to do with the Geological Column. ...
The message you are replying to said nothing about geological column/s. It was about the many pluvial lakes that formed several times in the past, and are evidence of glacial melt, not a world wide flood.
... Really, RAZD, you are very knowledgeable about all this supposed scientific history but apparently you don't have a single reasonable doubt about its veracity? If it's totally false you'll never know it.
Well knock me over with your evidence and gratuitous insult, boy that makes me change my mind. NOT.
You need at least one iota of evidence Faith ... you don't have it.
A salt flat is no indication of any relation whatever to the Geological Column, let alone its confining borders and no doubt sloping shoulders which don't exist in any of the strata of the Geo Column.
Here are the two posts I made that show the great extent of the strata of the Geological Column, layers that extend much farther than your lakes, the first one from a geological textbook and the other pointing out that the cores taken in the Midwest show continuous deposition of the same layers over thousands of square miles. You've got a hidebound distaste for the idea of the Flood and that's all that keeps you from recognizing that it's the only explanation for the actual evidence, even though your own explanation requires weird forms of denial..
Anyway here are the two posts I made about the extent of the strata of the gological column: Message 1458 and Message 1460. I should copy out some of it, I'll go and do that.
AbE: Here's one of them:
The rocks do lie in a much more definite sequence than we have ever allowed. The statements made in your book, The New Geology, do not harmonize with the conditions in the field. All over the Midwest the rocks lie in great sheets extending over hundreds of miles, in regular order. Thousands of well cores prove this. In East Texas alone are 25,000 deep wells. Probably well over 100,000 wells in the Midwest give data that has been studied and correlated. The science has become a very exact one. Millions of dollars are spent in drilling, with the paleontological findings of the company geologists taken as the basis for the work. The sequence of the microscopic fossils in the strata is remarkably uniform. The same sequence is found in America, Europe, and anywhere that detailed studies have been made. This oil geology has opened up the depths of the earth in a way that we never dreamed of twenty years ago.
The other post contains diagrams showing the extent of the rocks of different "time periods."
Again, the post you are replying to, Message 1493 makes no mention of geological column/s. You need to reply to Message 1495: it discusses why those diagrams actually refute your concept of a single geological column, showing that it would be different from location to location.
Just a quickie, your final quote does not say what you think it says:
AbE: Here's one of them:
The rocks do lie in a much more definite sequence than we have ever allowed. The statements made in your book, The New Geology, do not harmonize with the conditions in the field. All over the Midwest the rocks lie in great sheets extending over hundreds of miles, in regular order. Thousands of well cores prove this. In East Texas alone are 25,000 deep wells. Probably well over 100,000 wells in the Midwest give data that has been studied and correlated. The science has become a very exact one. Millions of dollars are spent in drilling, with the paleontological findings of the company geologists taken as the basis for the work. The sequence of the microscopic fossils in the strata is remarkably uniform. The same sequence is found in America, Europe, and anywhere that detailed studies have been made. This oil geology has opened up the depths of the earth in a way that we never dreamed of twenty years ago.
Great sheets due to inland seas that existed, not to a single flood, but they covered slightly different areas at different times (see Message 1495). Note that the sequence mentioned is of the fossils, not the rocks (you are misreading it):
... The sequence of the microscopic fossils in the strata is remarkably uniform. The same sequence is found in America, Europe, and anywhere that detailed studies have been made. ...
Here they are obviously talking about index fossils and their companion fossils being found world wide, how these fossils are found in the same ages of the various geological strata in different locations rather than in the same rock formations in those locations.
Details, Faith.
Enjoy
Edited by RAZD, : .

we are limited in our ability to understand
by our ability to understand
RebelAmericanZenDeist
... to learn ... to think ... to live ... to laugh ...
to share.


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This message is a reply to:
 Message 1497 by Faith, posted 12-28-2019 10:06 PM Faith has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 1504 by Faith, posted 12-29-2019 12:18 PM RAZD has replied
 Message 1505 by Faith, posted 12-29-2019 12:32 PM RAZD has replied

  
Faith 
Suspended Member (Idle past 1471 days)
Posts: 35298
From: Nevada, USA
Joined: 10-06-2001


Message 1504 of 2370 (869359)
12-29-2019 12:18 PM
Reply to: Message 1503 by RAZD
12-29-2019 11:50 AM


Re: Depositions, and Lake Bonneville DON'T show Flood Geology PT2
The WAY the Geological Column is different in different places is just that IN SOME CASES it has different sediments, but otherwise it is continuous with all the other strata, and certainly the fossil contents are the same, which is of course a major tenet of the ToE I'm sure you don't want to deny. Otherwise it's all the same layers as shown in the two posts I refer to. There is no continuation of the Geological Column going on now, and your example of Lake Bonneville has NO resemblance to it. And that's the honesty I'm asking for which of course is never going to happen.
Edited by Faith, : No reason given.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 1503 by RAZD, posted 12-29-2019 11:50 AM RAZD has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 1506 by PaulK, posted 12-29-2019 12:44 PM Faith has not replied
 Message 1507 by RAZD, posted 12-29-2019 3:16 PM Faith has not replied

  
Faith 
Suspended Member (Idle past 1471 days)
Posts: 35298
From: Nevada, USA
Joined: 10-06-2001


Message 1505 of 2370 (869362)
12-29-2019 12:32 PM
Reply to: Message 1503 by RAZD
12-29-2019 11:50 AM


Re: Depositions, and Lake Bonneville DON'T show Flood Geology PT2
I read the example just fine. You don't have fossils without the rocks, duh. and the first sentence is about the sequence of the rocks. Duh. I'm sick of this equivocation about the obvious. The rfocks are continuous. Who cares if the sediments aren't identical from location ot location. And why should your excuse for an interpretation of how they got there be better than the Flood which explains it all just fine. Had enough with this crap.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 1503 by RAZD, posted 12-29-2019 11:50 AM RAZD has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 1508 by RAZD, posted 12-29-2019 4:02 PM Faith has not replied
 Message 1512 by RAZD, posted 12-30-2019 11:52 AM Faith has not replied

  
PaulK
Member
Posts: 17827
Joined: 01-10-2003
Member Rating: 2.3


Message 1506 of 2370 (869364)
12-29-2019 12:44 PM
Reply to: Message 1504 by Faith
12-29-2019 12:18 PM


Re: Depositions, and Lake Bonneville DON'T show Flood Geology PT2
quote:
The WAY the Geological Column is different in different places is just that IN SOME CASES it has different sediments, but otherwise it is continuous with all the other strata...
Of course there are quite a lot of discontinuities, both vertically and horizontally. Indeed, differing sediments will often indicate a discontinuity.
quote:
... and certainly the fossil contents are the same, which is of course a major tenet of the ToE I'm sure you don't want to deny.
The fossil contents vary by the environment of the time, of course.
quote:
Otherwise it's all the same layers as shown in the two posts I refer to.
One of them doesn’t even show layers. And the other only says that the microfossils are the same worldwide - not the rocks.
quote:
There is no continuation of the Geological Column going on now, and your example of Lake Bonneville has NO resemblance to it
The first claim is false. As for the second, I see no reason why pluvial lakes should not be a source of evaporites.
quote:
And that's the honesty I'm asking for which of course is never going to happen.
Perhaps you would like to explain your definition of honesty since it requires us to say things that we believe to be false - and have good reasons to believe false.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 1504 by Faith, posted 12-29-2019 12:18 PM Faith has not replied

  
RAZD
Member (Idle past 1432 days)
Posts: 20714
From: the other end of the sidewalk
Joined: 03-14-2004


Message 1507 of 2370 (869386)
12-29-2019 3:16 PM
Reply to: Message 1504 by Faith
12-29-2019 12:18 PM


Re: Depositions, and Lake Bonneville DON'T show Flood Geology PT2
The WAY the Geological Column is different in different places is just that IN SOME CASES it has different sediments, ...
In some places yes, in others there would be erosion of exposed surfaces. This would apply to most areas not covered by the inland seas. Because what you are really talking about is the geological time scale as shown by the various age rocks found in various places. These strata can vary extensively in depth from place to place, down to zero thickness where there is net erosion. They can also vary in type of rock in different locations.
Thus there is no single "Geological Column" that extends around the world, there are a series of local geological columns showing the local depositions for the geological ages involved: it is a time scale you are talking about.
... but otherwise it is continuous with all the other strata, and certainly the fossil contents are the same, ...
Except where it is discontinuous (per previous comment) it is continuous with other strata of the period or geological time zone. That's like the current surface of the earth is continuous around the globe.
Certainly the fossils are of the same age. Because what you are really talking about is the geological time scale as shown by the various age rocks in various places.
... which is of course a major tenet of the ToE I'm sure you don't want to deny. ...
Which is what the evidence (details, Faith) show. That it is consistent with the ToE only shows the validity of the ToE in it's ability to explain the natural history of life on earth.
... Otherwise it's all the same layers as shown in the two posts I refer to. ...
The layers are continuous where the depositions from the inland seas are continuous, as shown by the maps for the different age depositions distributions.
... There is no continuation of the Geological Column going on now, ...
False.
... and your example of Lake Bonneville has NO resemblance to it. ...
Nor was it intended to show that, it was intended to show you that a lake bottom can be flat flat flat.
A point you seem to miss entirely.
... And that's the honesty I'm asking for which of course is never going to happen.
If you want honesty, you need to start accepting the honesty of the evidence in the details, not just what fits your fantasies.
It seems you can't handle the truth, you continually shy away from it.
Enjoy

we are limited in our ability to understand
by our ability to understand
RebelAmericanZenDeist
... to learn ... to think ... to live ... to laugh ...
to share.


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This message is a reply to:
 Message 1504 by Faith, posted 12-29-2019 12:18 PM Faith has not replied

  
RAZD
Member (Idle past 1432 days)
Posts: 20714
From: the other end of the sidewalk
Joined: 03-14-2004


Message 1508 of 2370 (869392)
12-29-2019 4:02 PM
Reply to: Message 1505 by Faith
12-29-2019 12:32 PM


Geological Column/s vs Geological Age Scale
I read the example just fine. You don't have fossils without the rocks, duh. ...
But there can be many different sedimentary deposits with the same fossils. That doesn't make the rocks the same deposition, it just makes them the same age.
... and the first sentence is about the sequence of the rocks. Duh. ...
Yes, but then there are six sentences about other things. The next sentence resets the context of "sequences" to be "The sequence of the microscopic fossils ... " followed immediately by the sentence "The same sequence is found in America, Europe, and anywhere that detailed studies have been made."
Further the two sentences before this states "The science has become a very exact one. Millions of dollars are spent in drilling, with the paleontological findings of the company geologists taken as the basis for the work."
The paleontological findings are the fossils, the index fossils of interest to the oil companies. Reading comprehension.
... I'm sick of this equivocation about the obvious. The rfocks are continuous. ...
No
they
aren't
The time periods are "continuous," in the sense they are the same around the world. The rocks laid down in those time periods are the same age/s, but that doesn't mean the rock layers are continuous. Those geological time periods cover large slices of time, so you can have several depositions at different times within those geological time periods.
... Who cares if the sediments aren't identical from location ot location. ...
People looking for honest evaluation of the evidence perhaps?
Different sediments show different deposition events or processes rather than a continuous process -- in fact it is evidence against a continuous process, such as would be the result of flood waters.
... And why should your excuse for an interpretation of how they got there be better than the Flood which explains it all just fine. ...
Except that it doesn't ... unless you ignore the details. Claiming it does is not showing how a flood can drop one type of sedimentary deposit (say clay for example) and then change to a different type of sedimentary deposit (say sand for example). This is a problem that you have yet to explain ... along with all the other sorting problems your fantasy model has.
... Had enough with this crap.
Then stop spreading it.

we are limited in our ability to understand
by our ability to understand
RebelAmericanZenDeist
... to learn ... to think ... to live ... to laugh ...
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This message is a reply to:
 Message 1505 by Faith, posted 12-29-2019 12:32 PM Faith has not replied

  
Faith 
Suspended Member (Idle past 1471 days)
Posts: 35298
From: Nevada, USA
Joined: 10-06-2001


Message 1509 of 2370 (869431)
12-30-2019 11:27 AM


Moving post about the prehistoric geological past
Moving my Message 1380 from the thread "Any practical use for Universal Common Ancestor?"
Subtitle: aboutRe: The unwitnessed (prehistoric) past
Yes, sorry I don't get everything said that needs to be said in one post, and I forget things I've said years ago. Whatever. The thing about the geological phenomena is that most of it is one time events that occurred in the Prehistoric past -- I sometimes say "historical" but that implies there are records available when I'm tryhing to talk about a past for which there are no records of any kind, which after all would be "witnesses." But I also don't want to rest any of this specifically on witnesses either because there are sciences that rely on indirect information, whichis what I was referring to about atomic phenomena and the mostion of the Earth and so on. There is no direct witnessing but there are measuruable AND REPEATABLE effects that can be used to study them. REPEATABLE is another important concept. The prehistoric geological past is about ONE TIME events, Unwitnessed in any sense of that word, and UNREPEATABLE. And for all I know I'm leaving out other criteria.
It's not that we can't know SOME things about that past, such as that fossils were once living creatures -- but that was not known to those who originally studied them as they came up with all sorts of outlandish ideas about them because they didn't have anything to compare them too. That's the ONE-TIME-EVENT phenomenon. Even that can be resolved as it was in the case of the fossils by a more reasonable interpretation.
But as for explaining the causes of the strata and the fossils, that's where we are getting into territory I'm arguing isn't so easily knowable, because of course I'm objecting to the standard interprreation of it which I consider to be let's say irrational? Time periods attached to slabs of rock by dating methods that don't even date the rocks themselves. Slabs of rock that couldn't ever possibly form from a landscape in a time period anyway. Fossils that form under rare conditions occurring in amazing abundance in these rocks, and sorted BY the rocks too. That's supposedly evidence of the time periods interpretation but once you see that a rock can't represent a time period the whole idea comes crashing down. And so on.
But really this discussion ought to be on the Flood thread anyway.

Replies to this message:
 Message 1510 by Sarah Bellum, posted 12-30-2019 11:42 AM Faith has replied
 Message 1513 by ringo, posted 12-30-2019 11:53 AM Faith has replied
 Message 1515 by RAZD, posted 12-30-2019 12:14 PM Faith has not replied
 Message 1516 by PaulK, posted 12-30-2019 12:19 PM Faith has not replied
 Message 1518 by RAZD, posted 12-30-2019 12:41 PM Faith has not replied

  
Sarah Bellum
Member (Idle past 623 days)
Posts: 826
Joined: 05-04-2019


Message 1510 of 2370 (869435)
12-30-2019 11:42 AM
Reply to: Message 1509 by Faith
12-30-2019 11:27 AM


Re: Moving post about the prehistoric geological past
You bring up a good point with the idea of "repeatable" phenomena. But while we can study beta decay or radio waves by watching ("detecting" rather!) them over and over, what about the happenings at the center of the Earth, or on a pulsar millions of light-years away? I'm sure you can think of many areas of science concerned with phenomena which cannot be manipulated "repeatably" with forceps and gloves on a lab bench!
(Of course, we CAN directly observe evolution and we CAN conduct experiments, as I described in my original post EvC Forum: "Best" evidence for evolution.. Look at the links about such topics as Buffalo grass, Madeira island house mice, the "American goatsbeard" and Nereis acuminata, but that's for another thread.)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 1509 by Faith, posted 12-30-2019 11:27 AM Faith has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 1511 by Faith, posted 12-30-2019 11:51 AM Sarah Bellum has replied

  
Faith 
Suspended Member (Idle past 1471 days)
Posts: 35298
From: Nevada, USA
Joined: 10-06-2001


Message 1511 of 2370 (869436)
12-30-2019 11:51 AM
Reply to: Message 1510 by Sarah Bellum
12-30-2019 11:42 AM


Re: Moving post about the prehistoric geological past
I can only respond briefly I'm afraid, to respond to your statement that we can observe evolution: we can only observe what is called microevolution, which is the changes that occur from generation to generation within a given species. We can NOT observe the kind of evolution described by the Theory of Evolution, species to species evolution that is. Because it does not occur. But microevolution yes, and we can discuss that on that thread where you posted the message you are refuerring to, if you like.
But sorry to say I'm about to fall asleep sitting here and have to go take a nap. This happens to me after I've been up a long time, and I simply can't wake up. Sorry to interrupt the discussion, but I'll be back later.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 1510 by Sarah Bellum, posted 12-30-2019 11:42 AM Sarah Bellum has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 1514 by Sarah Bellum, posted 12-30-2019 12:07 PM Faith has not replied
 Message 1517 by Sarah Bellum, posted 12-30-2019 12:31 PM Faith has not replied

  
RAZD
Member (Idle past 1432 days)
Posts: 20714
From: the other end of the sidewalk
Joined: 03-14-2004


Message 1512 of 2370 (869437)
12-30-2019 11:52 AM
Reply to: Message 1505 by Faith
12-29-2019 12:32 PM


The Geological Column is a time scale not a stack of rocks
To expand further on the points made in Message 1508, there is an essential element to the geological column time scale.
Let's start with a typical creationist approach:
Geologic Column | Answers in Genesis
quote:
William Smith first used the similarity of fossils to construct detailed geologic maps across wide areas. He used fossils to map and correlate rock layers and constructed the first geologic map of England and Wales in 1815. Smith was a creationist who believed in the old-earth view now known as progressive creationism. By the early 1800s the idea of an old earth was popular, though the idea of a global flood was still used to explain many geologic deposits.
The standard geologic column was constructed by combining descriptions of local areas to form a composite record. By 1885 the finer divisions of the column had been identified based on the principles established by Steno, Smith, and Lyell. These ideas were also beginning to impact the study of biology, and Lyell’s long-age ideas played a major role in Darwin’s development of the theory of biological evolution over vast geologic eras.
Index fossils played an important role in the development of the geologic column. The idea that life became increasingly complex over time, whether by some evolutionary force or continuous creation by God, was used to analyze the fossils in the rock layers. It was assumed that by identifying the order of fossil succession, the layers could be correlated from one region to the next. Index fossils are still one of the major indicators of the age of a given layer. Shelled creatures such as ammonites and mollusks are the most commonly used index fossils.
The geologic timescale we know today was not added to the column until after the development of radiometric dating techniques. Lyell and others had promoted the idea of millions of years of geologic history, but dates were not assigned to given layers until much later. Working on the assumptions of naturalism and uniformitarianism, the rock record was interpreted from these starting points. By the time radiometric dating techniques were implemented, the idea of millions of years of earth history had already become an established scientific fact. Using uniformitarian assumptions (see the discussion in chapter 4), the radiometric dating techniques are put forward as support for the timescale of the standard geologic column.
Which by and large is a fairly honest presentation of the history and development of the Composite Geological Column aka Time Scale (note that the vertical axis is years rather than types of rock). Note that radiometric techniques/data confirm the consistent ages of index fossils, because they have the same level ratios of parent/daughter, whether you accept the age calculation or not. Thus they also confirm the relative ages of the rocks in the assembled time scale.
The consilience of data from all the different sources show an ordered structure of sedimentary rocks building up over time from the distant past to the present (and continuing today).
... and the first sentence is about the sequence of the rocks. ...
A sequence of rocks that is then associated with time by the sequence of fossils, fossils that exist around the world at each time period ... index fossils.
... The rfocks are continuous. Who cares if the sediments aren't identical from location ot location. ...
This statement is confused at best, "the rocks are continuous, who cares if they aren't the same rocks" is what I read from it, and this implys that you mean something else by "the rocks" than what it sounds like.
What we can (hopefully) agree on, broadly speaking, is that the individual layers of sedimentary rocks are the same approximate age, made from sediment deposited in roughly the same time period, thus they can be a composite of different sedimentary formations in different locations but all of that same time period. That makes sense to me.
Now, returning to the diagram above we see that the time periods are measured in millions of years and we can combine this with the maps provided by HBD Message 448). So let me summarize them together for easy visual comparison, with the time periods from the Geological Time Scale added from Answers in Genesis above:
Ordovician
75 million years
Silurian
20 million years
Devonian
60 million years
Mississippian
(Carboniferous)
35 million years
Now it is rather unlikely that the patterns of the inland seas changed abruptly, and there must have been some transition from one to the next, a transition that would leave sedimentary deposits of slightly different ages and types and coming from different sources as the erosion patterns changed. As long as they fall within the time scale for the Devonian period, they would all be classified as Devonian sediment rocks.
Thus you could have sediments deposited at different times, still classified as Devonian, but from different sources, ie -- not a continuous rock formation, just all within the Devonian period, and similar transition periods throughout the other geological time periods.
These transitions would take time, because we know from fossil evidence that mature marine ecosystems were formed in each of the pertinent life zones for sea and shoreline habitats. After all that's how the index fossils get deposited in the sediments.
Indeed we know from Walther's Law that you would likely have silts, clays, sand deposits, etc all forming at the same time with transgressions and regressions -- different rocks being then form from these deposits as time passes. The siltstones would not be continuous across the area, the shale (from clay) would not be continuous across the area and the sandstones would not be continuous across the area.
Indeed, I see that what is now Wyoming is not covered at all in the Silurian period, but it is in the other maps, so the Silurian rocks would not be continuous over Wyoming.
The argument that the rocks are large continuous slabs is patently false, there is no single layer of only one type of stone all formed at one time.
The details show the difference between fantasy and reality.
Enjoy

we are limited in our ability to understand
by our ability to understand
RebelAmericanZenDeist
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This message is a reply to:
 Message 1505 by Faith, posted 12-29-2019 12:32 PM Faith has not replied

  
ringo
Member (Idle past 439 days)
Posts: 20940
From: frozen wasteland
Joined: 03-23-2005


Message 1513 of 2370 (869438)
12-30-2019 11:53 AM
Reply to: Message 1509 by Faith
12-30-2019 11:27 AM


Re: Moving post about the prehistoric geological past
Faith writes:
REPEATABLE is another important concept. The prehistoric geological past is about ONE TIME events, Unwitnessed in any sense of that word, and UNREPEATABLE.
Repeatable does not mean that the events are repeatable. We can not repeat the destruction of the World trade Center but we can be very sure that it did happen.
What is repeatable is the observations of the existing evidence. Fifty scientists with different backgrounds can observe the wreckage of the WTC and agree on how it got into that state. Similarly, fifty scientists with different backgrounds can look at the rocks and agree on how they get into that state.

"If you can keep your head when all about you
Are losing theirs and blaming it on you...."
-- Rudyard Kipling

This message is a reply to:
 Message 1509 by Faith, posted 12-30-2019 11:27 AM Faith has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 1519 by Faith, posted 12-30-2019 7:50 PM ringo has replied

  
Sarah Bellum
Member (Idle past 623 days)
Posts: 826
Joined: 05-04-2019


Message 1514 of 2370 (869440)
12-30-2019 12:07 PM
Reply to: Message 1511 by Faith
12-30-2019 11:51 AM


Re: Moving post about the prehistoric geological past
Your statement that species-to-species evolution hasn't been observed is no more true than a statement that beta decay or radio waves haven't been observed, as I described in my original post EvC Forum: "Best" evidence for evolution.. Look at the links about such topics as Buffalo grass, Madeira island house mice, the "American goatsbeard" and Nereis acuminata, but that's for another thread.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 1511 by Faith, posted 12-30-2019 11:51 AM Faith has not replied

  
RAZD
Member (Idle past 1432 days)
Posts: 20714
From: the other end of the sidewalk
Joined: 03-14-2004


Message 1515 of 2370 (869441)
12-30-2019 12:14 PM
Reply to: Message 1509 by Faith
12-30-2019 11:27 AM


The unwitnessed (prehistoric) past through the looking glass
Good idea, I'll move my off-topic post from Any practical use for Universal Common Ancestor? as well:
PaulK Message 1376, Any practical use for Universal Common Ancestor? Which is not a difference, as I pointed out. Geologists observe processes in the present day, see the results and use those results to interpret the evidence.
Which they can do with high confidence because
  • they are consistent with all other processes known and
  • no change in physical behaviors of materials has been discovered in spite of active investigation to test the constancy of constants and their interactions
Thus we look at the Oklo natural reactors and see exactly the reactions and daughter isotopes we would see if we ran that experiment today, except we don't even need to run the experiment because the reaction are so well known that the reactions in modern reactors can be calculated, precisely, and those calculations verify the reactions at Oklo are completely consistent with today's reactions.
We can also look at tree rings, lake varves, marine varves, and ice layers and observe the patterns from year to year to year and not see any remarkable changes or alterations in their pattern and thicknesses of layers that would denote a massive change in climate, certainly no disruption from a flood inundating their locations and disrupting their growth processes, as fully discussed in Age Correlations and An Old Earth, Version 2 No 1. So we can count 900,000 annual layers that are linked from today into the past with high confidence in their accuracy. We can match these annual counts with radioactive decay of carbon-14 and Beryllium-10 and get the same ages from their decay calculations. This consilience is confirmation that both systems are accurate measures of age.
AND we can measure the isotopes in sediments and see the ages of the different layers, not just the relative ages that is provided by the law of superposition, but the actual radiometric age. Geologists often use two or more radiometric methods to determine the ages of sediments, because consistent results is more consilience for the accuracy of the results.
This process can be seen in the Devil's Hole dating from Age Correlations and An Old Earth, Version 2 No 1, where thorium-230 (λ1/2 = 75,380 years) and protactinium-231 (λ1/2 = 32,760 years) were used. We an compare the different proportions of these isotopes with age to see how the ratio of one to the other changes with time:
Getting consistent ages from both methods is another verification of the accuracy of these measurements, because anything that would affect the decay would have to magically match these proportions.
But there is more: there is a climate correlation between the Devil's Hole calcite deposit and the ice cores:
quote:
Based on the ages determined from the radioactive decay of thorium and protactinium the values for 18O and 13C values were tabulated and these climate patterns were compared to those of the ice cores. The result was that they were "highly correlated" with climatological data from the Vostok ice core data, which "matches almost perfectly" the climatological data from the Greenland ice core data. ...
AND this consilience gives us very high confidence in the accuracy of all radiometric dating systems, because you can't change the physics of one without disrupting all the other AND these two are tied to two different ice layer annual counts. That's four different systems agreeing on results over many many years.
Now, compare this to the age measurements in the bible ... right from the start we find there are no measurements of the age of the earth, no mention of it, nothing to base it on.
Certainly nothing with any kind of accuracy or objectiveness.
Next we find that the purported age derived by Bishop Usher are based on assumptions of the lengths of lives of people, and that some of those reputed people lived over 400 years, which is simply preposterous as there is absolutely no known physical evidence to support these assumptions.
Finally we find that when people try to reproduce these ages they end up with wildly different results.
Obviously looking through the looking glass we find that there may have been "witnesses" to various parts of the story, but -- as so often happens today with eye witness testimony -- it is inaccurate and unreliable when compared to hard physical evidence.
The earth is old, very, very, very old and there is no record of a world wide flood. It is a delusion.
Enjoy
Edited by RAZD, : .

we are limited in our ability to understand
by our ability to understand
RebelAmericanZenDeist
... to learn ... to think ... to live ... to laugh ...
to share.


Join the effort to solve medical problems, AIDS/HIV, Cancer and more with Team EvC! (click)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 1509 by Faith, posted 12-30-2019 11:27 AM Faith has not replied

  
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