Posted on 02/25/2009 8:17:44 AM PST by GodGunsGuts
Lake Bonneville. Not a worldwide flood.
Was the sea level higher, or has Bermuda been pushed upwards?
Wow, thanks for the correction. So I take it it's salty. I did wonder with the Gates of Hercules, or whatever, came to me I think, Straights of Gilbralter, it's called now why it would be fresh.
The Med is far less salty than the Dead Sea. The Dead Sea is one of the saltiest bodies of water in the world. Maybe that’s what was throwing you off.
Some of the Egyptian pyramids are older than Noah’s flood. Why are they filled with dust rather than dried up mud?
That was it! Bonneville. No, I figured it wasn't a worldwide flood. I do tend to take the bible more literally than some, but nobody arguing a worldwide flood has been very convincing to me even if I might like it to be so. Doesn't add up with the animals and speciation.
Plus I polluted my mind with Edgar Cayce years ago. Among other things, a few of which may be true, somebody conjectured that after this flood, the earth tilted on its axis and drew all the excess water to the poles where it froze.
Does a straw man float in water?
So we’re supposed to accept the measurement of sea level and reject the part about it happening about 400,000 years ago? We pay attention to scientists when they say things you like and ignore them when they don’t?
Just trying to establish the ground rules here.
You too? Mine is also pulluted with Carlos Castenada. It's a wonder I can function at all!
I do read some on sciences that interest me, but not having a proper background puts one at a distinct disadvantage. I did study some chemistry and physics but am still too lacking in knowledge and understanding about some very basic things.
I did "float" in the Great Salt Lake. An odd but fascinating experience. It's not a place you'd really want to swim unless you had to.
So does that mean you are giving up on Young Earth theories? Too funny. FWIW, 400,000 was in the middle of an interglacial, so sea levels well could have been higher from having smaller or non-existent ice around both poles.
Why is the ocean salty?
Because pure water evaporates from the ocean, leaving behind the salt. That water then falls as rain, possibly upon the salty earth. Water that falls on the salty earth returns to the ocean carrying salt with it. Pure water evaporates from the ocean, leaving behind the salt.
Rinse and repeat for eons, and voila, salty ocean.
LOL. Regret the wasted years on that, remember seeing books on/by Carlos but never read any.
I can't function very well lol. Still I don't blame it on my poor choice of reading material, and I've of a mind that even garbage can stimulate you into seeking answers elsewhere.
Thanks for the honesty, Something that is so rare these days, even on FR.
That’s really a good explanation of salt water for dummies, thanks. I’m daring to assume parts of the ocean floor contain large deposits of salt as well but perhaps not if it was never dry land. My so many questions today.
Surely you know better than to think I accept long-age uniformitarianism. The point of posting this, like so many other papers and articles I post, is to show that God’s creation is forcing the Evos ever closer to the creationist position.
The sea floor would contain salt deposits only if seawater had reached its saturation point with those salts. It has not. Salt deposits dropped in the ocean will dissolve into the ocean.
And the sea at it's deepest is about 36,000 feet. Between that and the top of Everest is a difference of 61,000 feet.
I think that a miracle would change it to wine, not fresh water.
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