Yes... you are sadly misinformed. The article was 1992 and used correct figures. He also said that of the 600 there was likely about 100 on the ark.*
Your figure of 900 inflated up to 1400 at one time and has been dropping. As you know, calling something a different species by looking at bones is subjective
*Bones can sing any tune you like almost.
New Analyses Of Dinosaur Growth May Wipe Out One-third Of Species
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/10/091031002314.htm
Or
Here's the problem - 1,400 dinosaur species were named, yes, but it turns out way less than that were actually discovered. Many of the "new" species turned out to be duplicates of previous finds, were later judged too inconclusive to identify as a new species, or were actually not dinosaur remains at all. So the real question is how many of those 665 dinosaurs did the 23 authors correctly identify. It's a pretty unimpressive percentage: just 274 of those names, about 41 percent, are still in use today.
http://io9.gizmodo.com/5648539/the-...mers-just-dont-seem-to-know-what-theyre-doing
Duke.... trying to inflate the number of animals doesn't help you... there still was lots of room on the ark. And....the ark represents salvation. There still is room on the ark for you.
Hello, 6. You responded to Duke, but I believe you responded to my post and accidentally inserted his name in the quote.
Your links were interesting. Indeed it does seem that there are far fewer than the 1400 names species you mention. It seems there are about 300 verified dinosaur
genera. Many genera contain only one species, but many also contain tens of species. And, according to the USGS, scientists estimate that over 700 genera have yet to be discovered:
http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/dinosaurs/types.html
We've only been looking for dinosaur fossils for less than two centuries. We have so much more to find.
But 6, let's pretend that the only species in existence were those 20 or so that I listed for you. If your ark was truly 450x75x75 feet, then just the ones I listed put together are far far too massive to fit on it, never mind putting other dinosaur species and all of the other creatures in existence on as well, and never mind trying to feed all of those animals (even if somehow God allowed them all to eat straw, there simply could not be enough straw).
D. Hallorum, a species of diplodocus (a type of dinosaur I listed for you) was 108 feet at full length. A brachiosaurus was 85 feet long. A Spinosaurus egypticus was 50 feet long. And the list goes on. Even if they were juveniles who were just 1/4 of their full size, how in the world do you suggest all of these creatures could fit onto an ark of just 450x75x75? It's simple math, 6. The volume of the creatures far exceeds the volume of the ark