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To: WizWom
Sorry for the length of this post, but it takes longer to clean up a mess than it does to make one.

But, there are a number of interesting fossils that get just as quickly downplayed by the evolutionists as archeopteryx by the creationists. Things like fossilized dinosaur footprints crossed by very human looking footprints in the same strata.

There are good reasons for that, and it's not just that the only ones anyone can find seem to be in Paluxy, TX on property owned by YECs. Most of them really look like 3-toed dino prints. The very few that don't look [oxymoron alert!] truly fake.

As for strata dating, I believe in at least one major flood and probably 3. strata from prior to these events is misdated very easily, as they each laid up a sudden accumulation.

Mainstream geology can't find even one world-wide flood event.

As for strata dating, I believe in at least one major flood and probably 3. strata from prior to these events is misdated very easily, as they each laid up a sudden accumulation. The clean limestone regolith (here in Illinois, ranging from surface to 200 m down, depending on where you are) is most probably, as near as I can tell, the result of the noachide flood.

I don't happen to know the age real geology assigns to your limestones, but nothing here in WV goes past the Pennsylvanian Orogeny some 300 million years ago. We don't have dinosaur fossils at all, for instance. That tends to go unexplained in flood geologies. Other mountains like the Himalayas have mammal fossils. Thus, some things are clearly geologically very, very old and others are not.

Everything since then was laid up by the after effects of that flood and the ~4000 years since.

All of the river valleys I have seen - throughout the world - have been quite obviously both young and formed by a vastly greater water flow than currently supported.

No. The Potomac near my house drains mountains formed in that aforementioned orogeny 300 million years ago. It started flowing then. It's older than the dinosaurs. At Cumberland, MD, it has a gorge called "The Narrows." That's a place it erosionally cut a late-rising mountain like a buzz saw as fast as the mountain could rise. Erosion is always faster than plate tectonics.

Even the Himalayas, as spectacular as they are, were sliced by the Brahmaputra River as they rose, leading to mountains in near-perfect cross-section. You can put a real limit on how old a valley is by 1) the mountains the river drains, and 2) the mountains the river cut because it was already flowing in a certain place when a new mountain rose. I've got old mountains and one pretty old valley that I'm living in.

Now, I'm no fool - I know about carbon dating and ice cores and tree cores. tree cores were used to date - from the current trees to the petrified specimens - to reach to about 5000 years before present.

Carbon dating is one of the better calibrated radiometric techniques, but it doesn't go past about 50K years. It's used more in archaeology than in geology. For a good primer on radiometric dating, try this site.

I think that if the creation of C-14 in the upper atmosphere was changed for some reason, that would badly skew C-14 dating.

Scientists discovered the variability of C14 formation and had recalibrated their charts before the antiscience screechers ever tried to make a talking point out of it. We knew how to detect it, we knew how to fix it, we fixed it. Check the link I gave you above.

I most emphatically do not believe the earth was made from nothing in 6 days 6000 years ago or so; I do not believe that the earth was uninhabited by any life prior to 6000 years ago; and I do not believe the multitude of life forms on the planet were made from nothing.

You wouldn't have to announce that if you hadn't swallowed so many talking points from people who do.

And um, no, not a satanic atheist conspiracy, but a greedy man. and then perpetuated because people have reputations at stake or a need to believe. To a man who is greedy and self-centered at his core, or who has a cause to hate a church, there is ample reason to believe in something that lets you discount Gods. Incidents of soft-tissue fossilization - and feathers easily qualify as soft tissue - are extremely rare.

This is true, but the number of feathered theropod fossils--yes, including Microraptor gui--is beyond dismissal at this point. This article isn't about M. gui, for instance. I brought up gui because they just found the same features on Archaeopteryx. Was your alleged faker lucky or what?

Incidents of soft-tissue fossilization - and feathers easily qualify as soft tissue - are extremely rare. People are claiming that in archeopteryx, there has been 80% soft-tissue fossilization! I'm just amazed! Where are our fossilized parrots, cormorants, sparrows and such with feathers? What's that? Oh, there aren't fossils of modern things.

You seem to think faunal succession is a weakness of evolution. I would say it's a real problem for people who don't accept it. Where is that Precambrian rabbit? There wasn't any.

Tell that to the fish they found in Africa, living peacefully, while it's relative - same morphostructure - "30 million" years old - was fossilized.

Again, you wouldn't have to tell people you're not a YEC if you didn't believe everything they tell you. In fact, why don't you just list the YEC talking points you DON'T believe and your posts will be shorter?

Anyway, the problem with the coelacanth YECism. That's from An Index to Creationist Claims, which allows you to check before posting whether you're going to stump modern science and get a Nobel for your shoot-down of evolution.

... we find fossils that were obviously horses...

... and fossils that are tending horse but not quite, and fossils that are tending toward the things that are tending horse, but not quite, and fossils that are barely diverged from generalized Condylarth herbivores...

... or Mastodons...

Mastodons, yes! A dead end off the fish-to-elephant in 50 steps of "microevolution" series.

... which easily lasted until the human era.

News to me. Did you mean "mammoths?"

There should be fossilized birds with fossilized feathers. There might be, I'm no archaeologist.

There are. Here's a really early one with still a few primitive features.

But I don't want to hear about crazy mixed things like rehona.

Why not? It is a prediction of evolution that we should find fossils that flesh out a phylogenetic tree of life. Thus, we should find crazy in-between things going from reptiles to mammals. We do. We find all kinds of in-between things.

Visuals unlimited has (1) fossil feather impression, and Archeopteryx. the fossil feather is not in combination with a skeleton.

I can't tell what you're talking about exactly here, but Archaeopteryx isn't M. gui. Crackpot Fred Hoyle raised the "Archy is an ordinary theropod with faked feathers" claim long ago. It was extensively investigated and utterly refuted. The feathers are real. There are more feathered dinos and primitive early birds retaining dino features than you will ever lay a glove on.

Here's a definitely non-flying dino with real feathers.

Clicking on the thumbnails at the bottom of the page gives you pictures like this...

... or this.

Quite a birdlike appearance, but it's on a little theropod with T-rex body plan.

Frankly, I find the Archeopteryx "feathers" over-done - like someone wanting desperately to prove something. But it not to me impossible that that someone was not human; I believe in supra-human agents. Such might seem impossible to you. Our razors shave at different places, it seems.

Any skepticism which borrows discredited talking points from the YECs is an unwarranted skepticism of two centuries of scientific evidence.

176 posted on 09/24/2006 7:33:28 PM PDT by VadeRetro (Liberalism is a cancer on society. Creationism is a cancer on conservatism.)
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To: VadeRetro
VadeRetro:
WizWom:
Incidents of soft-tissue fossilization - and feathers easily qualify as soft tissue - are extremely rare. People are claiming that in archeopteryx, there has been 80% soft-tissue fossilization! I'm just amazed! Where are our fossilized parrots, cormorants, sparrows and such with feathers? What's that? Oh, there aren't fossils of modern things.
You seem to think faunal succession is a weakness of evolution. I would say it's a real problem for people who don't accept it. Where is that Precambrian rabbit? There wasn't any.
Actually, I think faunal succession was directed. I just don't think that the fossil record is accurately dated or sequenced.

And yes, I meant Mastodon. Survived in North America until "10,000 years ago".
As for the mountains being "cut" by rivers... it doesn't take much of a rise to have a river shift course. Look at the Mississippi valley. Modern stone "cuts" are occurring in places where the valley or canyon is already formed and the rise is miniscule. Pretty pictures of cross-sections like http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/canyon/sfeature/geologygraphic.html leave out a LOT of time - and beg some questions like "how did the canyon not fill up when it was under a "shallow sea"? Coastal places fill with mud to become flat, least in the places I know. Especially if a river dumps into the bay. You see, the "transformed under heat and pressure" sort of makes me wonder just what sort of heat and pressure would be happening to something that was in a canyon. Since, of course, the idea is "the waters been flowing here all this time, and the mountain grew slowly, so it eroded each year."
I really don't care if you believe me, I'm just saying what I believe.

181 posted on 10/20/2007 8:03:05 PM PDT by WizWom (Stupidity Hater!)
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