Peter S emailed against my statement of average 3/4 mile sedimentary layers
Peter S emailed against my statement of average 3/4 mile sedimentary layers
Peter S: Bob, thanks for responding [to his original email]. I don’t think any geologist worth his salt (couldn’t resist that one) would agree with that. 3/4 of a mile is a long way. I can tell you from experience that there are many places in Connecticut that are not covered with sedimentary deposits. ... I also know from experience that portions of Cape Cod are terminal moraines...
BE: Peter, aren't your examples too anecdotal to be worthy of even an informal challenge to a scientific claim? So, I'll concede your places in Connecticut, and portions of Cape Cod, but refer you to the sedimentary Grand Canyon (which is 277 miles long, 10 miles wide, and about one mile deep).
PS: You tend to make statements of a scientific nature off the top of your head.
BE: Peter, seems you just made a "top of your head" rebuttal effort. I could put more weight in your disagreement if you actually made an effort to present some observation of an average depth of sedimentary layers on the continents, rather than a couple anecdotes.
PS: However, since you need to justify your predetermined concept of a young earth, special creation, no evolution etc I think you are just stuck in that position.
BE: Of course, the same could be say of you.
PS: The concept of a young earth (6-10,000 years old) is scientifically untenable, the facts do not support a young earth or young universe.
BE: Peter, last year I debated the Age of the Earth against one of America's more well-known geophysicists and a professor of mathematics (interested in the subject) from CU in Boulder, Colo. If you give me your address, I will send you the audio of that moderated debate, along with the slides used; if you listen to the debate, you can do two things: (1) attempt to answer the scientific challenges that the Old Earthers didn't answer; (2) try to figure out why the Old Earthers in the audience were so dejected, with one of them, an atheist physicist from Seattle who flew in for the debate, admitting to me that night that the Young Earth side won the debate.
PS: The concept of special creation as opposed to the current theory of evolution is also scientifically untenable.
BE: If someday you find out, let's say by hearing it from God Himself, that He did in fact specially create mankind, perhaps you'll then realize how wrong this statement of yours is, unless of course (at that time) you define science as a discipline designed specifically to hide the truth.
PS: ...I first heard you on the radio several years ago (that station does not broadcast your show anymore but I do check it on the web). I was interested until you had some one on who claimed to have found a T. rex with recent vegetation in its mouth. I was then still interested but more for the comedic aspect of your show. I cannot remember who the T. rex person was but they did have a web site, I tracked it down and e-mailed to get more specific info, (hey who knows if it was true then maybe I could grab a piece of the Nobel prize $) but unfortunately they never responded.
BE: Peter DeRosa and his family excavated the largest and most complete allosaur skull ever found, and a movie was made of the discovery, Raising the Allosaur. You can view a
clip of that video and see the allosaur skull itself. And yes, there was wood in its mouth which was only partially fossilized. By why should this surprise you? Three examples: (1) Baumgardner (of Los Alamos fame)
has shown that about the same amount of Carbon 14 is found in coal in three distinct portions of the stratigraphic record (Eocene, Cretaceous, and Pennsylvanian) indicating that the coal is not millions of years old, and also, that it was laid down at the same time; (2) Not far from Minneapolis, just a few years ago, a quarry unearthed rare jellyfish fossils, rare because their tender bodies don't readily survive to fossilize, and they found these vertically in seven strata that according to the news report, supposedly had formed over a million years, providing yet another specific challenge (like polystrate fossils [Hi Poly!]) indicating layers believed to be millions of years old formed rapidly; (3) evolutionary scientists have been recovering organic matter, complete proteins, DNA, and even entire bacterium from *within fossils* that are tens or even hundreds of millions of years old. Thus, Peter, you should reconsider before
a priori dismissing a claim of partially un-fossilized wood excavated in the mouth of a dinosaur.
Thanks for writing! -Bob