ScottH:
LOL- “get ye to a texbook”- Funny. Those same publishers are also saying in other texbooks …
No reason for strawman arguments
I of course meant a college level, peer reviewed, geology textbook
Just because grade school level texts in the soft sciences are subject to political monkey business is no reason to dismiss hard science texts. they are less subjective
ScottH said:
….Read the study by John Baumgartner during his days at Los Alamos on this topic.
His model for runaway subduction only worked if he used artificial values for geological materials. It failed when real values were used
ScottH:
Also- ……. the coelacanth….
(There’s a big oops. I know the carnegie museum of natural history has since relegated their specimen to the unseen basement of their museum as apposed to admitting their display error- claiming it proof of evolution.)
:banghead:
You’re kidding with this right? That statement could only be made by someone without even a basic grasp of what evolution is.
Reptiles evolved from amphibians…does that mean there shouldn’t be frogs still around?
When they say that all land vertebrates are descended from coelacanth-like animals, that does NOT mean that each and every coelacanth evolved into a land vertebrate.
One way populations speciate is when they are isolated from each other. If a population of coelacanth found a niche with little or no pressure to adapt to they could have easily stayed relatively unchanged to the present. No big mystery there.
From turtles to cockroaches, there are many species that have been fairly stable for quite a while.
ScottH said:
…… And we just see so many catastrophic floods creating sandstone burial today?
Yes, of course. Fluvial deposits are laid down every day and they will be sedimentary rocks in a few million years.
ScottH:
Look at the Hell Creek formation up against the rockies-
You’re just messing with me aren’t you?

I know you aid your original post was “cut and paste” but you should read these things first. Of course fossil formation is more likely in flood plains! Under your theory they should be distributed everywhere evenly
Hells creek is an ordinary fluvial deposit. The geology is quite well known.
ScottH said:
………Here’s what one scholar- Daniel C. Dennett-
A philosophy professor with no biochemical background
ScottH said:
………Translation- “We may not know what we are talking about- but I have faith the Biblical Christians know even less… but there may be disagreements here with my calibration.”-
Of course there are disagreements on calibration!
What do you think science is?
Mitochondrial eve and Y chromosome Adam have been identified (curiously they are separated by about 100 k years so “Mommy’s baby Daddy’s maybe” has apparently been a way of live for some time )
ScottH said:
………Go “slow burial” a chicken bone in the back yard. In two years, let me know if anything is even left, let alone a fossil….
Sigh
Are you somehow surprised that fossilization is a rare occurrence? Or that certain environments favor formation more than others? Is this supposed to be earth shattering news?
Did you even look at the link I gave you on the type of fossils and the various way they are formed?
Oh and for the record I was observing a pile of bones in my neighbor’s yard for a period of 10 years. They were slowly being buried under a nice think layer of leaves. They may well be in someone’s museum in a million or so years.
