Dinosaurs and the Flood

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If humans have been around for 40,000 years or more, how come Europeans discovered the Americas only 500 years ago? It must have taken them 40,000 years to learn how to build a boat!
Well, more like 1000 years, if you consider Leif Eriksson. And, more like 16-17K years ago, if you consider the crossing of the Bering land bridge and entry into North America from Asia!
 
Erickson’s vikings found America, but never stayed. They told people about this mythical “Vinland” but the rumors eventually dried up as people lost interest and nobody ever went back.
 
Most of our ancestors only got the murder end of the stick, but they weren’t totally barbaric. Some even settled in France and became the Normans.
 
Wênan heonu sê hnot bêon? we fr¯æge lîcian ðês!

Me, I can’t imagine doing all those accents and weird letters. Modern English is good enough for me, even if it’s a product of invasion.
 
What on earth does that mean? 10k years isn’t acceptable because it doesn’t tie in with the evidence. Archaelologic evidence. There is no ‘Darwinist folklore’. Do you think that archaeologists adjust their figures to tie in with other branches of science? What nonsense.

Dates of up to 80,000 years have been proposed using carbon dating and optically stimulated luminescence and have been confirmed by separate tests in Waikato Uni and Adelaide Uni. https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2017/jul/19/dig-finds-evidence-of-aboriginal-habitation-up-to-80000-years-ago .
Their carbon dating is faulty, I expect. The history of the world suggests man hasn’t been around for anywhere near 80,000 years.

He earliest forms of writing appear at about 3500BC.
Are we to believe it took humans more than 70,000 years to come up with writing? No, I don’t think so.

Ditto for the wheel (3500BC) - according to Darwinist folklore, humans are so stupid it took them more than 70,000 years to invent something as basic as a wheel.

Metallurgy - discovered 5000-3000BC.

History suggests humans haven’t been around for anywhere near 80,000 years.
 
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Well, more like 1000 years, if you consider Leif Eriksson. And, more like 16-17K years ago, if you consider the crossing of the Bering land bridge and entry into North America from Asia!
Who needs a land bridge when you could quite easily cross the Bering Strait in a boat? It’s only 50 miles wide.
 
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Freddy:
What on earth does that mean? 10k years isn’t acceptable because it doesn’t tie in with the evidence. Archaelologic evidence. There is no ‘Darwinist folklore’. Do you think that archaeologists adjust their figures to tie in with other branches of science? What nonsense.

Dates of up to 80,000 years have been proposed using carbon dating and optically stimulated luminescence and have been confirmed by separate tests in Waikato Uni and Adelaide Uni. https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2017/jul/19/dig-finds-evidence-of-aboriginal-habitation-up-to-80000-years-ago .
Their carbon dating is faulty, I expect. The history of the world suggests man hasn’t been around for anywhere near 80,000 years.

He earliest forms of writing appear at about 3500BC.
Are we to believe it took humans more than 70,000 years to come up with writing? No, I don’t think so.

Ditto for the wheel (3500BC) - according to Darwinist folklore, humans are so stupid it took them more than 70,000 years to invent something as basic as a wheel.
Again, there is no ‘Darwinist folklore’. You might as well talk about Galilean folklore or Newtonian folklore. And man didn’t appear a bare 80,000 years ago. We emerged from Africa approximately 300,000 years ago. We arrived in Australia 80,000 years ago.

And incidentally, the wheel only made an appearance around 3,500 years ago. And not in Australia or America. Or the inhabitants of the New World.

If you’re going to argue against something then you need to study it a little first.
 
He earliest forms of writing appear at about 3500BC.
Are we to believe it took humans more than 70,000 years to come up with writing? No, I don’t think so.

Ditto for the wheel (3500BC) - according to Darwinist folklore, humans are so stupid it took them more than 70,000 years to invent something as basic as a wheel.

Metallurgy - discovered 5000-3000BC.
For the vast majority of our history, humans were too busy getting bodied by nature to actually accomplish much. There have been multiple points where we were actually an endangered species. Plus, worldwide conditions from the last Ice Age didn’t clear up for a long while, and this prevented agriculture from taking hold. So writing, a concept that can’t really exist without society, was bottlenecked by agriculture. Everything was, really. If you need to move to find food, more energy is spent on that than exchanging ideas and inventing things. It’s not a coincidence that metallurgy, the wheel, and writing all emerged once agriculture did. They all depended on the exchange of ideas, since none of those things have a natural analogue that humans could have observed prior to society.
Who needs a land bridge when you could quite easily cross the Bering Strait in a boat? It’s only 50 miles wide.
Siberia, especially in early human history, was an inhospitable wasteland. Barely anybody lived there, and even those that did didn’t have a reason to cross the strait. The people that did cross the strait did so chasing herds of prey across a land bridge or something similar. When the strait flooded, there was no more incentive to cross, so nobody did.
Sounds unlikely - no one would lose interest in free, fertile land.
Free? Yes. Hospitable? Very much no. Very far from home, pretty cold, and filled with hostile natives. The vikings were smart to leave, because they had pretty much no chance of survival if they stayed.
 
Again, there is no ‘Darwinist folklore’. You might as well talk about Galilean folklore or Newtonian folklore. And man didn’t appear a bare 80,000 years ago. We emerged from Africa approximately 300,000 years ago. We arrived in Australia 80,000 years ago.

And incidentally, the wheel only made an appearance around 3,500 years ago. And not in Australia or America. Or the inhabitants of the New World.
Right, so humans have existed for 300,000 years but they only discovered writing, the wheel and metallurgy in the last 3500 years? That makes no sense.

At what point does God creating man in his image (Adam and Eve) fit into your
Darwinist tale?
 
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