One of the more interesting Flood theories I’ve seen involves runaway subduction of the tectonic plates. That would’ve tended to make the earth a more perfect sphere without any high or low places, at least until that plate re-emerged, with all breathing life dead and buried.
The “fountains of the deep” phrase indicates that there was a lot of subterranean water under high pressure that suddenly burst forth, and that could’ve caused the runaway subduction as those gigantic caverns of water emptied and collapsed.
I think I read somewhere that there’s enough water on earth to bury everything to a depth of one half mile if the earth were a perfect sphere.
What would one expect to find if there was a worldwide deluge? Billions of dead things buried in rock layers all over the earth.
The really interesting fossils are the polystrate trees, etc. This is tree trunks that supposedly took billions of years to rot, at least according to evolution theory, because the trunk stretches through what’s supposedly billions of years of strata.
Why couldn’t the strata just be the filtering process of a flood event, and that’s how a tree trunk could easily end up stretching through many strata.
And couldn’t it be that the more simple life forms would end up at the bottom since they couldn’t escape, with more and more complex and intelligent life forms occupying places higher and higher in the strata because they could escape? But this is hardly true in a general sense. Many times the more complex and more intelligent forms are lower in the strata than the less complex and less intelligent forms.
Yes, good post.