Posted on 01/21/2009 2:23:18 AM PST by DieHard the Hunter
The discovery of a tuatara fossil in the South Island is helping prop up the "Moa's Ark" theory that some parts of New Zealand have always stayed above the sea surface.
Scientists said the fossil provided strong evidence that the ancestor of the present-day tuatara covered the Zealandia landmass as it split from Gondwana, 82 million years ago.
(Excerpt) Read more at 3news.co.nz ...
Photo at source
(BTW, a Moa is a giant extinct flightless bird that roamed New Zealand as recently as 700 years ago. There are sometimes claims of actual sightings in deep bush (lots of that here in NZ) but these aren't really considered credible. They were hunted to extinction by the Maori.
Ping
Since all of NZ is made of greywacke - fossilized mud, with recent volcanic intrusions, how could it have formed above water?
> Since all of NZ is made of greywacke - fossilized mud, with recent volcanic intrusions, how could it have formed above water?
Excellent question to which I don’t know the answer. I suspect not all of New Zealand is formed of fossilized mud: the Southern Alps, for example, are created from two tectonic plates pushing into each other. IIRC that would be igneous rock down there.
With a few exceptions (eg Mt Cook/Aoraki, Mt Taranaki, Mt Ruapehu) our volcanic activity happens on the upper half of North Island, from Taupo thru to Whangarei.
The mud that formed the greywacke came from the ground-down remnants of Gondwanaland. The volcanic activity came much more recently. It happened that MZ was formed at the edge of 2 (perhaps 3) tectonic plates, so as time went on a tectonic fault developed that runs through Wellington and South Island.
> The mud that formed the greywacke came from the ground-down remnants of Gondwanaland. The volcanic activity came much more recently. It happened that MZ was formed at the edge of 2 (perhaps 3) tectonic plates, so as time went on a tectonic fault developed that runs through Wellington and South Island.
I’ll have to take your word on that, as I know very little about geology. What I do know is that our native Flora and Fauna are found nowhere else on earth — except, interestingly, there is a pre-historic bug in South Africa that is very similar to our Weta.
Apparently, our dinosaur fossils are unique, too.
This means that Noah would have required a large motor on his Ark to drop off all of our animals and then somehow get back to Mt Ararat in time for the waters to recede. Either that, or our animals evolved here in situ. Either that, or the Genesis Flood was restricted to a much smaller area and was not universal.
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Thanks DieHard the Hunter. Gotta ping this for the title alone -- "Moa's Ark". :') Also a possible ping for the Catastrophism list. |
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“...My personal view is that NZ is a continental fragment of potentially great age...”
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