Otherwise, we'd have to conclude everything Kepler and Newton showed us is wrong. You see, by looking at the paths of long-term comets, we can see where they go, and if you add up all the perhelia of such comets, we end up with a cloud of dots far out beyond Neptune. So the cloud exists, merely by observing long-term comets.
:squint: If that is all the Oort cloud is then it's nothing more than what we have now. And what we have now might have started on Earth.
Uh .. OK ...Why not simply take the evidence as it is?
You're asserting your assumptions as facts. There are only around 3600 known comets .. they would contain nowhere near enough water to fill even one small sea on Earth.The mass of all comets is much greater than the mass of all the water on the Earth.
How, exactly did all that water and dust get lifted off the earth and moved out up to a light year from the sun?
How did water get into space by your reckoning?
3Show us your numbers, Stipe.
I actually own a copy of In The Beginning. Not only that, but I suspect he's used comments I made on one of the sections in the book to edit a later edition.
Excellent! Then you won't have any problem providing some substance to your future posts. Drive by derision is so ... granitic. :yawn:
Good for you. :BRAVO:In 2003, I wrote up and posted detailed annotations on the appallingly bad section he wrote on Out of Place fossils, calling out the shamefully poor scholarship that he hid in the technical footnotes (Pravda as a source to prove dino/human coexistence in a "scientific" book? - no, that's quality stuff). It could be coincidence, but those criticisms were largely reflected in later editions of the book (and Walt is known for editing his creationscience.com site on the fly based on criticisms from forums that he inexplicably says he won't debate in). If that's what happened, I don't mind acting as one of his unpaid editors, as the bowdlerized chapter is now pretty thin, and is hardly convincing evidence for creation. You'd think that if YEC was true there'd actually be more evidence in this section as time goes on, not less.
Got anything relevant to say?
I also summarized my main issues with the Hydroplate idiocy earlier in the thread, if you'd bothered to read that far back. I will summarize my main issue again. To quote Walt: ...[a] global flood whose waters erupted from interconnected, worldwide subterranean chambers with an energy release exceeding the explosion of 300 trillion hydrogen bombs. Get real. Seriously. Here's the description of the effects from a 'mere' 250 million megaton meteor impact, courtesy of the University of Virginia: Never mind the additional energy caused by the galloping continents that Walt proposes, or his handwaving explanations of why their movement wouldn't reliquify the earth, this 300 trillion megaton explosion would eliminate all life on the planet. The flood would be superfluous. The final catastrophe of the impact of additional hundreds of millions of megatons through all the meteor impacts that we know about is just gravy. It's childish in the extreme to believe that any life bigger than bacteria would live through these events. And none of this deals with any of the other major problems associated with YEC (age of the earth disparities, failure to adequately explain geological column or fossil record,, repopulating the earth, biogeography, etc).
So there's no way the comets could have originated on Earth?