K
kenofken
Guest
Geologists have long accepted that periodic catastrophes are part of the formation process in the greater context of relatively constant rates of change over the long haul. Work on things such as this megaflood are showing how significant and relatively recent these can be. It makes for exciting times in the field of geology, but it comes nowhere close to undermining the evidence or conclusions for a very old Earth. Showing that large volumes of fast moving water can destroy things faster than slow steady erosion doesn’t exactly turn physics on its head. Katrina and the Tsunami of several years ago are ample evidence that water can destroy quickly. Cutting a caynon or drilling holes in the scablands can take 10,000 years or 10 hours, but that doesn’t change the age of the rock layers you cut, only the rate at which layers were exposed.C’mon now - everyone know that uniformtarianism is indeed the foundation of long ages. At the dawn of uniformatarianism, it was reading the geologic column and assigning a time to the layers.
We now know that catastrophism is much more prevalent than recently thought.
Bottom line - Uniformatarianism was used to discredit the flood and Scripture accounts. It no longer can be used as such.
Even if it turns out that catastrophism is the predominant force responsible for Earth’s surface features, that still doesn’t get you a hundredth of one percent of the way toward proving a young Earth. You’ve still got the enormous problem of radiometric dating carried out by countless investigators and institutions over a century which points to an age of 4.5 billion years, give or take a few million. The only way the young Earth “scientists” have been able to take on this problem is to assert that radioactive decay rates in the recent past happened ONE BILLION times faster than they do today, for inconceivable reasons and by inconceivable mechanisms. There is no evidence at all to suggest that radioactive decay rates vary to any significant degree under any conditions relevant to geology.
Then there’s other mountain ranges of evidence pertaining to evolution, rates of genetic diversion etc., none of which point to even the remotest possibility of a 6,000 year old planet. If people want to believe it because they feel bound by religion to do so, so be it. But to base that belief in science requires nothing less than the total abandonment of reason and a fantasyland suspension of belief in everything our eyes and minds tell us.