I’ll grant the ad hominem against you (not against that quack you mentioned) but the rest you’ll have to prove. I directed every response to a statement you made so I’m not even sure where you’re pulling the strawman from.
Now I’ll admit I’m about as well versed in creation theory as the flat earth theory but I have to accept that you know a bit about what most other people know in the fields paleontology and plate tectonics.
So why even bother telling me you have a fossil (buried alive???) from Ohio...big freakin deal, virtually every single part of the planet was under water at one point or another, outside of a mountain range you’ll be hard pressed to find bedrock that doesn’t contain fossilized sea creatures in some amount.
As for Camelback are you changing your story there? What is this caked desert sand cause I’m pretty sure we’re talking about sandstone which is something entirely different then just sand.
But for the hell of it say you’re right? Explain to me then how desert sand, deposited on a mountain, turns into sandstone without being compressed by overhead deposits...where does the pressure come from to do such a thing?
Add a canard to your toolset.
You need to think for yourself. Listening to men with broken watches tell you what time it is, when you can look up and see where the Sun is, just doesn’t make sense.
Some knowledge is best learned by discovery, rather than by doctrina.
Pressure = height*specific gravity. 400atm seems to be plenty to do the job.