Originally posted by One Eyed Jack
Oh, but they are. A worldwide flood should leave behind sedimentary layers all over the world with billions of dead things buried in them, and that's exactly what we find.
If all you're going to do is to take that simplistic a stance, then yes, I suppose so. But a little thought will show that it is absurd.
A worldwide flood, occuring over a very short period and at a relatively recent time in history - certainly long after the appearance of both human civilization and modern life forms - should have left:
- A single, consistent (in terms of depth, location among other strata, etc.) layer, of
- remains (not necessarily "fossilized" - you'd be proposing a pretty darn rapid rate of fossilization for that to be the case) of MODERN life forms, AND humans, AND their civilization, all showing evidence of a rapid death at very close to the same time,
- uniformly across the planet (i.e., not that the contents would be uniform, but the evidence would have to have the same sort of appearance everywhere).
Further, since it is proposed that the flood waters "covered the Earth" for a significant period of time (several months at least), we should also see evidence of a massive die-off of either salt- or fresh-water aquatic species (it is very hard to imagine that the "worldwide ocean" represented by the flood water could have sustained BOTH), and further that we should find the remains of MODERN examples of both sort of species (SOME of both would die naturally, anyway, during this time) far inland today. We should, for instance, see the skeletons of whales and sharks and such buried not too far below the topsoil in, say, Kansas.
We don't see any of these things. What we do see IS consistent with some relatively small areas of present-day land at one time being under water, and vice versa (and not necessarily at the same time, either). So again, there is simply no such "fossil evidence" of a worldwide flood at anything remotely like the time suggested.
I see no contradictions in the evidence.
Not surprising, is it?