otseng wrote:goat wrote:
I believe micatala did quite the adequate job of showing how your analsyis of the ice cores is faulty.
I had not actually given ice cores much thought before this thread. But now after debating it, I see it even less of a problem for the FM than before.
However, the thread is 'lets try to refute the evidence against a global flood', but rather is a a 'deluge of evidence for the Flood'.
Where is the evidence for a flood?
I agree in principle with what you're saying. But, it was not me that brought up ice cores. Since it was brought up as a counterargument, we had to delve into that. However, we can move on to other areas if interest in ice cores has waned.
Just for the record, I believe it was me who brought up ice cores.
I have to say, I find it astonishing that, after the last number of pages, you find ice cores less of a problem than before. I understand you may not have had time to investigate all of the information provided, but I certainly have found even more reason to dismiss the flood than I did before. It had previously been my impression that ice cores could put the date of the flood back about to at least 120,000 years. This date is not only very safe, but we can actually reasonably put it to over half a million years ago based on the oldest cores.
However, I will suggest we leave the ice cores behind and go back to the grand canyon at this point.
Now, previously otseng had held that the strength of the FM was that it could predict globally how the sedimentary layers looked. otseng had also previously claimed that all the layers above the oldest basalt layers were as a result of the flood.
Going back to
page 58, we have this portion of Post #572 by otseng. (We started debating ice cores around page 60)
otseng wrote:
Here's another image that gives a better perspective:
http://www.jamesgunderson.com/roadtrip2/default2.asp
This diagram shows that a huge section of layers were formed first. Then folding. Then fault and erosion. There is little evidence of folding while all the layers were formed. And there is little evidence of erosion between the layers while all the layers were formed.
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However, in the case of the FM, it is able to make a generalized prediction
without even knowing about the particular location. On this basis, the FM prediction is more powerful.
I responded a bit later as follows, again as part of the longer Post #577
micatala wrote:
micatala wrote:
You keep pointing to this expectation that the SG should include the possibility that there are layers formed, then folds in these layers, then layers on top of these. We agree.
Not only a possibility, but this should be the norm and not the exception.
Again, I see absolutely no reason to jump to the conclusion that what you are looking for should be "the norm and not the exception." You are making a huge assumption about what the SG should lead to, not taking into account the length of time required for formations, how often and where techtonic forces create folding and faultings, etc.
I had also pointed out the following:
otseng wrote:
micatala wrote:Note that in the "Grand Staircase" picture you provided, there are two smaller regions of layers that have faulted and slid past each other towards the bottom right where the canyon is. The rightmost of these two is labelled 1 and 2 in the more zoomed in graphic. Then we have layers on top of these.
As for the Grand Canyon Supergroup, I admit that I do not have a final answer for this.
otseng alluded to Walter Brown's explanation for this, and then said:
I would point out two things.
One is that we now have layers not being layed down during the flood, counter to otseng's previous statement.
Second and more importantly, we have an example which destroys one of otseng's central claims concerning the strength of the FM. otseng has consistently criticized the SG for not being able to make global predictions without alluding to the particular circumstances present in an area. He has consistently touted the FM's ability to do just this.
And yet, when we look at the evidence, the FM now has to create some kind of ad hoc explanation for this particular situation. It seems that the FM is, contrary to claims, really no better than the SG regarding the FM's central claim to superiority over the SG.
I also note that otseng refers to the fossil record here. We are told there are not microfossils in these tilted layers and so this leads otseng to believe these layers were laid down before the flood. Now, how these layers got to be how they are due to a flood raises huge questions. I will leave those for a subsequent post.
In another subsequent post, we will get back to the fossil record in this record. I have already posted some information on this previously, showing how the record is not consistent with the FM. I will have more to say about this as well soon.
" . . . 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