otseng wrote:Grumpy wrote:PS Still haven't heard an explanation of the extreme erosion in the Smoky Mountains compared to other mountains if they all formed at the same time. Stop avoiding that one too.
micatala wrote:However, I would suggest trying to explain the massive salt deposits and other features of the Williston Basin would be more relevant and the phyla issue could be left to the side for at least the time being.
I am arguing against many differing opponents at the same time that bring out different arguments. To have the expectation that I can quickly respond to everybody's questions is unreasonable. If you want me to adequately address any topic, we'll need to concentrate on one area at a time.
Fossils was the area last area agreed upon that we focus on. And we have branched out to many areas since then. So I suggest we concentrate on fossils first before moving on to other areas.
Alright, I'll agree to hold off on non-fossil evidence from the Williston Basin.
However, I believe not only the presence but also the absence of fossils in the geological strata should be fair game.
Thus, if we have a 300 foot layer of salt that happens to have no fossils in it, this still seems to me to be relevant to the fossil issue.
I will see if I can find more information on fossils in particular in the Williston Basin.
Also, I note that otseng claims that corals could have been transported from one environement to another and that this accounts for corals appearing in the strata above more mobile marine animals in the grand canyon.
On the other hand, we are told that the reason that humans, dinosaurs, modern mammals, flowering plants, etc. are not found in the grand canyon layers is because they did not exist in this particular environment.
This begs for some discussion of how the FM explains transportation of dead organisms. What organisms did get transported? How far? By what exact mechanism? If coral get transported, why not other organisms from that same environment? How about transportation of mammals, dinosaurs, and other land animals?
Also, another question I brought up earlier.
Which life survived the flood and how did they do it?
This speaks to the fossil record in that some organisms alive at the time of the flood (e.g. dinosaurs, trilobites) are only found in the fossil record and thus did not seem to survive while many others (humans, flowering plants including orchids, dolphins, cockroaches, horseshoe crabs, etc. ) did.
" . . . the line separating good and evil passes, not through states, nor between classes, nor between political parties either, but right through every human heart . . . ." Alexander Solzhenitsyn