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Flood Made Britain An Island 'In 24 Hours'
The Telegraph (UK) ^ | 9-25-2006 | Tim Hall

Posted on 09/24/2006 6:00:46 PM PDT by blam

click here to read article


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To: blam

Maybe Velikovsky was right after all!


61 posted on 09/24/2006 8:32:11 PM PDT by TX Bluebonnet
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To: blam

The flood would have taken place between 400,000 and 200,000 years ago..and rises in sea levels.

Those poor Neaderthals.. if they only had known about global warming, they could've taken action...


62 posted on 09/24/2006 8:33:58 PM PDT by UglyinLA
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To: Jeff Gordon
You are mistaken. There was this ancient text, y'see, and there was a talking snake. But people managed to survive. And then there was a flood. Most people and animals and plants did not survive, although some claim that all the animals and plants survived. However, no innocent human unborns and toddlers survived (this is said to encourage morality). But then there was a miracle or two.

Then there was the notion that earth was not the center of the Universe. The godly types objected--just as they promoted the previous drownings of innocents.

In understanding how human language developed, there is insufficient attention as to how a snake could gain this ability. This is a gap in evolutionary biology.

63 posted on 09/24/2006 8:36:46 PM PDT by thomaswest (Thank God for continental drift.)
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To: nmh; DannyTN

The reason why nobody believes your theory is that the timelines for differnt floods simply will not match up, period.

They're many thousands of years apart, in some cases hundreds of thousands of years.

For example, the hypothesis in this article is that the channel between England and France was cut 200 million to 400 million years ago.

Unfortunately for you, the Grand Canyon is only 5 to 6 million years old.

I mean, if the Old Testament said that God sent a volcano to chastise mankind, would you be massaging volcano sites all over the world, trying to make their timelines line up?


64 posted on 09/24/2006 8:40:46 PM PDT by CobaltBlue (Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice. Moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue.)
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To: blam

One just has to look at places out in the American Northwest to see what sudden water breakthroughs can do...Like when Lake Bonneville and Lake Missoula both changed the landscape...

http://www.glaciallakemissoula.org/virtualtour/index.html

http://geoinfo.geosc.uh.edu/VR/idaho/index.htm


65 posted on 09/24/2006 8:42:58 PM PDT by Knitting A Conundrum (Act Justly, Love Mercy, and Walk Humbly With God Micah 6:8)
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To: ClearCase_guy
[IMO, this is why some contemporary science gets such a bad reputation. You state an estimate range going back perhaps as much as 500,000 years. But not 600,000? Not 700,000? No, no, but 500,000 is a definite possibility (more recent is more likely, of course, but the range of informed estimates goes back as much as 500,000 years). ... You're guessing, conjecturring, and supposing. And you're calling it science.]



It's a necessary part of the scientific process to give quantitative estimates within a range and specify likely error with a percentage. You would have been wise to educate yourself about how science is practiced before you attempted to ridicule others.
66 posted on 09/24/2006 8:47:16 PM PDT by spinestein (I'm spending this year clinically brain dead......for tax reasons.)
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To: blam

Only surprising if you don't believe in Biblical Creation.


67 posted on 09/24/2006 8:48:44 PM PDT by balch3
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To: blam

They just wanted to rid themselves of France so bad that they gave everyone oars and said row your hearts out!


68 posted on 09/24/2006 8:50:12 PM PDT by dalereed
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To: ClearCase_guy

Gradualism took such a strong hold in Darwin because it was so congruent with Whig political history. If the theory of evolution still stands in 100 years, it probably will be as different from Darwin's as Ptolemy's view of the cosmos is from that of the Hubble telescope.


69 posted on 09/24/2006 8:50:36 PM PDT by RobbyS ( CHIRHO)
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To: TX Bluebonnet

LOL! Good one!


70 posted on 09/24/2006 8:50:54 PM PDT by spinestein (I'm spending this year clinically brain dead......for tax reasons.)
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To: SunkenCiv
"...The Atlantic Ocean sent its waters along the Scottish and Norwegian shores, and also through the Channel that had been formed only a short while before. Human artifacts and bones of land animals were dredged from the bottom of the North Sea; and along the shores of Scotland and England, as well as on the Dogger Bank in the middle of the sea, stumps of trees with their roots still in the ground were found. Forty-five miles from the coast, from a depth of thirty-six metres, Norfolk fishermen drew up a spearhead carved from the antler of a deer, embedded in a block of peat. This artifact dates from the Mesolithic or early Neolithic Age and serves as one of many proofs that the area covered by the North Sea was a place of human habitation not many thousands of years ago. From the analysys of the pollens found in the peat taken from the bottom of the sea, the conclusion was reached that thse forests existed in not too remote times. It has also been assumed that the building of large areas of the North Sea in the Subboreal period resulted from a rather sudden sinking of the land, which some authorities date at about 1500 B.C."

Source: Earth In Upheaval. by Immanuel Velikovsky.

71 posted on 09/24/2006 8:58:43 PM PDT by Fred Nerks (ENEMY + MEDIA = ENEMEDIA)
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To: thomaswest
[I agree with you that it is impossible to know how language started, but it seems to me understandable in terms of development of brain capacity...]



A small part of our brain known as Broca's area is 100% necessary for language and the study of it's evolutionary development is understandably a matter of interest to anthropologists. Other primates have similar but much less well developed areas in their brains which are responsible for complex communication between individuals.
72 posted on 09/24/2006 9:07:27 PM PDT by spinestein (I'm spending this year clinically brain dead......for tax reasons.)
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To: Fred Nerks

The Sinking Lands, which lay to the west of Britain (between Britain and Ireland) are mentioned in the Mabinogeon; the stumps of apparently suddenly submerged forests have been found off Wales. Also, most are familiar with Lyonnesse. Winnie Churchill's history of, hmm, Britain mentions the submerged forests and whatnot and that the North Sea floor was once dry land. (':

And much smaller events of this kind have taken place historically, here and there:

Clare Places: Islands: Mutton Island or Enniskerry (9th century catastrophe in Ireland)
Clare County Library | prior to November 19, 2005 | staff writer
Posted on 11/18/2005 2:58:58 PM EST by SunkenCiv
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/1524751/posts

[snip]

According to the "Annals of the Four Masters" the island was once called Fitha Island and it formed part of the mainland until the day "the sea swelled so high that it burst its boundaries, overflowing a large tract of country, and drowning over 1,000 persons." This happened on March 16th, 804. Some reports describe it as an earthquake, others as a tidal wave when "the sea divided the island of Fitha into three parts." These three islands are Mutton Island, Inismattle (or Illanwattle) and Roanshee (or Carrig na Ron). There is a fourth island in the area called Carraig Aolacan.

[unsnip]


73 posted on 09/24/2006 9:10:31 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (updated my FR profile on Saturday, September 16, 2006. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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To: carumba
The Grand Canyon follows a meandering course and has a dendritic ( tree-like ) system of tributary canyons. It was clearly formed by a gradual erosion process.

Compare and contrast the "braided stream" appearance of the Spokane Scablands, caused by the scouring action of a catastrophic flood.


74 posted on 09/24/2006 9:40:33 PM PDT by dr_lew
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To: blam

Didn't a similar thing happen here?


75 posted on 09/24/2006 9:42:23 PM PDT by GOPJ (Muslim outrage would be taken more seriously if Muslims weren't such "double standard" hypocrites.)
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To: patton
Ummmm...because it makes sense?

Only if you don't read topographical maps. The rim of the Grand Canyon is the highest point in the area, by thousands of feet. For the canyon to be cut by a catastrophic flood, the water would have had to flow uphill for thousands of feet in elevation. Water doesn't do that. It doesn't go for the highest point, it goes for the lowest.

If a huge amount of water would have suddenly been flowing in the area, and the topography were the same then as it is today, with the exception that the Grand Canyon did not exist, the water would have flown around what would have been a small mountain, not over it.

The only explanation that "makes sense" is that the land in the area was gradually being upthrust, as the water flowed through it. Water flow, upthrust, and erosion were at an equilibrium, to some extent. That the Canyon wanders rather significantly is indicitave of the different materials present, in that some materials erode in water faster than others. If the channel was always the lowest point, the water would have stayed in the channel. Otherwise, it would have gone around.

76 posted on 09/24/2006 10:49:52 PM PDT by wyattearp (Study! Study! Study! Or BONK, BONK, on the head!)
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To: dr_lew

GRAND CANYON

MARS

http://www.holoscience.com/views/view_mars.htm

77 posted on 09/24/2006 10:51:51 PM PDT by Fred Nerks (ENEMY + MEDIA = ENEMEDIA)
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To: LexBaird

Yes, that is correct. There was another inland sea in south east Utah.


78 posted on 09/25/2006 3:53:00 AM PDT by carumba (The secret of life is honesty and fair dealing. If you can fake that, you've got it made. Groucho)
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To: patton
As others have pointed out the Grand Canyon has the traits of an erosion valley. The western badlands, however, seem to have been formed by a catastrophic flood or floods. Check it out here (PDF).
79 posted on 09/25/2006 6:20:49 AM PDT by Straight Vermonter
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To: bw17
Play nice. There are some good people here.
80 posted on 09/25/2006 6:21:54 AM PDT by Straight Vermonter
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