Posted on 09/24/2006 6:00:46 PM PDT by blam
Flood made Britain into an island 'in 24 hours'
By Tim Hall
(Filed: 25/09/2006)
Britain may have become an island after a Biblical-style flood split it from Europe in less than 24 hours, according to new geological research.
The flood would have taken place between 400,000 and 200,000 years ago, sweeping away hills between Britain and what is now France.
The theory could rewrite British prehistory, as current text-books teach that Britain - once a peninsula of continental Europe - split from the great land mass after a long process of erosion and rises in sea levels.
However, surveys of the Channel bed using new sonar techniques have revealed the remains of a huge valley, running south-west from the Strait of Dover.
The sonar survey, led by Sanjeev Gupta, from Imperial College, London, uncovered deep bowls, scour marks and piles of rubble on the sea bed that may have been caused by a torrent of water.
Dr Gupta said in a paper published at an academic conference: "In places, this valley is more than seven miles wide and 170 ft deep, with vertical sides. Its nearest geological parallels are found not on Earth but in the monumental flood terrains of the planet Mars.
"This suggests the valley was created by a catastrophic flood following the breaching of the Dover Strait and the sudden release of water from a giant lake to the north."
According to Dr Gupta's theory, France and Britain would have been linked by a high ridge of chalk hills, running roughly between Dover and Calais. To the north would have been a freshwater lake, fed by rivers, and deepened over thousands of years.
The lake, hundreds of feet above sea level, finally overflowed the chalk ridge and swept down towards the Atlantic. The water washed away the soft chalk hills and left the British Isles a separate land mass.
Dr Gupta's work is outlined in his book Homo Britannicus: the Incredible Story of Human Life in Britain, to be published next week.
You can believe in gods or faeries to your heart's content. And disbelieve the understandings of physics to your heart's content. Your narrow personal predelictions have nothing to do with a divine understanding.
Wegner and continental drift is a even better example.
Yeah, you can't help but be amused when someone refers to a 10,000 year-old ice core sample as having "long range" information on global climate history!
Hmm... I recall when creationists were saying that DNA was a work of satan, there was no truth in it. Henry Morris and Duane Gish at ICR railed against DNA for 40 years.
Now---exactly what do you mean by a "second code". If you have any basis with any evidence, perhaps you can enlighten us.
What, exactly was the first code? What is the "2nd code"?
I know that's been proposed, but it doesn't make sense. You don't need an ark for a black sea event. You simply herd your flocks out of the way. You don't get a year long flood out of the black sea either
"The only evidence for a global flood is the Bible, and I'm sorry to have to tell you the creationist geologists who were looking for the proof gave up about 1830."
They didn't give up, the prominent Scriptural geologists died off and noone rose to take their place. But the long earth geologists as the following link shows, were influenced heavily by their world views.
Some of the ideas that propelled long age geologists to prominence over scriptural geologists have been disproven. The debate over rapid stratification, polystrat trees and other things has shifted through the years.
"History is confirming that the Scriptural geologists were right. Lyells uniformitarianism was the ruling dogma of geology for almost 150 years until the late 1970s, when neocatastrophism began to emerge, and with it came reinterpretations of the geological record.23 Lyells way of interpreting the rocks simply does not fit the facts and evidence of catastrophism at a global level is becoming increasingly obvious, even to many evolutionists."
The origin of old-earth geology and its ramifications for life in the 21st century
This explains why we have Holy water and baptism and chlorinated water supplies.
The evidence is simply not there. No water canopy or other hokum will make it work. There is simply no evidence in a number of fields which would have to be be there if there was a global flood.
With that, good night all. Its late and I haven't shaved.
The reality of nature trumps personal fantasies.
I was just going by the cited pdf. I did a seat-of-the-pants ID on a reference to an "upland channel" mentioned in the paper, so I certainly could be "all wet" ( heh heh . ) I was using Google Earth, which continuosly displays the elevation of the cursor, and it matched the statement of the paper that the channel re-entered at 4280 ft. , so I thought that was it. Looking at Fig. 10 of the paper, the "Lake Channel" referred to seems to be a few miles down stream from my jpeg, but it does appear to be part of the same channel.
The "ruling dogma" for 16 centuries had to do with a "divine right of kings" as interpreted by one church. The USA, coming after the Reformation, threw off this Old World stuff of hierarchy and blind faith without real evidence. The Bible never mentions democracy or individual rights.
Evolution is grand unifying concept of nature, and includes natural law. Evolution deniers are like all those long forgotten on the wrong side of history.
It could have been a unique regional flood associated with the late Ice Age, so that the myths all refer to the same event, misapprehended as global.
I imagine we can all agree on your point of view: "It is a wet bird that flies by night."
Some of us have curiosities about "polystrat trees". Are these in the woods where we go hiking?
Is "the ruling dogma of geology for almost 150 years" different from Catholic dogma for 1400 years?
Do you accept the Reformation? Is there a Protestant view of evolution that you agree with?
You say in 3 words an idea that is very true.
A private belief in one god about one "divine law" is selfish. The public knowledge of our environment and how we are related is part of science education and our future.
Possibly, but there are other scenarios: Kangaroos of the Middle East Article by Dr. Richard Paley
Furthermore, satyrs are mentioned in the prophesies of Isaiah as properly translated in the KJV, and thus we do find kangaroos in the Bible. Isaiah prophesies the destruction of Babylon, warning that it will not be inhabited, but that "satyrs shall dance there" (Isa. 13:21 -- note that "dance" here is economically translated from the Hebrew raqad, which has a fuller meaning of "to skip/spring about or to leap"). This prophesy proves that at least some kangaroo stragglers could still be found in the Middle East up to the fall of Babylon in 539 BC.
Of course it stays in the channel. It CUT the channel. The river wandered around, always flowing in the easiest direction possible. Water isn't intelligent, it just flows downhill. Hard rock on one side of the flow, soft rock on the other side, it will erode the soft side first, and go that way. It flows downhill.
I don't think that we disagree here. The Grand Canyon was cut by the river that runs through it, not by the imaginary flood that supposedly flowed over it. If there was such a flood, it would have flowed around it: It could not have flowed over it.
According to the whole "flood theory" nonsense, the Grand Canyon was cut by waters flowing over it, which would have been impossible had it not existed in the first place, for the waters to flow through. Otherwise, the water would have flown around that particular hill.
The only logical conclusion is that the ground was rising as the water was flowing, and that the water chose the easiest way through. That way is called erosion. It happened simultaneously. The hill rose, and the water flowed in the only direction that it could; downhill. The water cut the Canyon. No great flood, just slow and simple. The hill rose, and the water adjusted. It never left the canyon that it was carving because there was nowhere lower for it to go.
Not exactly. It wasn't a staple of anything until Henry Morris wrote his "Genesis Flood" book in 1961. This was 7th-day Adventist apologetics at the time, and wasn't taken "seriously" by anyone else until maybe 20 years later.
I hope ol' Henry remembered his hydraulic engineering in the "afterlife"; it might be kinda, uhh, warm where is now, considering how many people he led away from Christianity.
Yep. The Kansas school board retained an expert from Turkey, who had helped to destroy science in his own country.
It's rather like the fact that Mussolini and Hitler recruited Communists much more easily than they recruited free-market classical liberals.
LOL. And then they derive some "morality" from it. Preachers amaze me, too.
Are they against some dietary proscription in your religion?
We always thought Unicorns could catch Cheerios on their horns. And that virgins could have babies.
What are you doing here?
Now let me explain the pixie theory of {poof}. There was a Flood, somewhere, perhaps. Most creatures were disfavored--for no particular reason. But some were saved, for no particualr reason. And then something else happened, and sure enough there were cows on green Alpine pastures in Switzerland and ranches in Texas. And the people were exceedingly great joyed by all this.
The opinion of cows is not recorded. IDiots at the Discovery Institute, however,...
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