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universalchiro wrote:hotfire wrote:why should there be a trail of sediment across the ocean floor? continents dont float on top of water dumping sediment over their edge onto the ocean floor like an overfilled dumptruck would leak a dirt trail while it drove down the road...
I understand the use of comical language to make my contentions seem childish and unscientific, but Continents do dump sediment over their edge onto the ocean floor. The mechanism is called rivers. Every continent has rivers. Yes even Antarctica has a river of ice. And each river deposits sediment (from the continent) onto the ocean floor.
Therefore, since there is no trail of sediment on the ocean floor from the Mid-Atlantic ridge to current mouths of rivers, then there are two viable options:
A. The continents had zero rivers and therefore no mechanism to deposit sediment for a trail. Not likely.
B. The continents moved quicker in the beginning of the break up of Pangea and the age of the break up of Pangea is not 120 million years ago but roughly 4,500 years ago around the time of Noah's flood.
So ask yourself, since you didn't know that Continents dump sediment over their edge onto the ocean floor, maybe there are other things you may not know, but believe just because someone told you. Check it out for yourself. Look at maps of the ocean floor and maps of river deltas, and ponder the lack of sediment deposit at the deltas. And ask yourself is it possible that the continents moved quickly at the break up of Pangea? Yes, it's possible and this explains the lack of a sediment trail from MidAtlantic ridge to the Amazon and also explains why rivers around the globe don't have enough sediment deposited at the deltas to support 120 million year old continents.
This hypothesis is not only possible, but plausible.
The observable evidence: The amount of sediment rivers deposit, the amount of deposit that only supports 4500 years and the lack of trail deposit on the ocean floor..
The testability: The rate of deposit/amount of deposited sediment equals rough estimate of 4500 years
BigBallinStalin wrote:universalchiro wrote:hotfire wrote:why should there be a trail of sediment across the ocean floor? continents dont float on top of water dumping sediment over their edge onto the ocean floor like an overfilled dumptruck would leak a dirt trail while it drove down the road...
I understand the use of comical language to make my contentions seem childish and unscientific, but Continents do dump sediment over their edge onto the ocean floor. The mechanism is called rivers. Every continent has rivers. Yes even Antarctica has a river of ice. And each river deposits sediment (from the continent) onto the ocean floor.
Therefore, since there is no trail of sediment on the ocean floor from the Mid-Atlantic ridge to current mouths of rivers, then there are two viable options:
A. The continents had zero rivers and therefore no mechanism to deposit sediment for a trail. Not likely.
B. The continents moved quicker in the beginning of the break up of Pangea and the age of the break up of Pangea is not 120 million years ago but roughly 4,500 years ago around the time of Noah's flood.
So ask yourself, since you didn't know that Continents dump sediment over their edge onto the ocean floor, maybe there are other things you may not know, but believe just because someone told you. Check it out for yourself. Look at maps of the ocean floor and maps of river deltas, and ponder the lack of sediment deposit at the deltas. And ask yourself is it possible that the continents moved quickly at the break up of Pangea? Yes, it's possible and this explains the lack of a sediment trail from MidAtlantic ridge to the Amazon and also explains why rivers around the globe don't have enough sediment deposited at the deltas to support 120 million year old continents.
This hypothesis is not only possible, but plausible.
The observable evidence: The amount of sediment rivers deposit, the amount of deposit that only supports 4500 years and the lack of trail deposit on the ocean floor..
The testability: The rate of deposit/amount of deposited sediment equals rough estimate of 4500 years
You have yet to address your many critics' questions; therefore, you're not interested in rational debate. You're here to spout some silly monologue, grow tired, fart, and sit down.
_sabotage_ wrote:
I am not using the Bible to back up my point, I'm only presenting what the opponents of intelligent design propose.
khazalid wrote:in biblical terms of course, the animals are here for our use and benefit. we have dominion over them.
i think this is a cunning biblical trick. an even newer testament would surely prohibit the eating of flesh
universalchiro wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:
You have yet to address your many critics' questions; therefore, you're not interested in rational debate. You're here to spout some silly monologue, grow tired, fart, and sit down.
I've tried to answer each inquiry, if I've missed one, re-ask and I'll try to answer it.
PLAYER57832 wrote:khazalid wrote:in biblical terms of course, the animals are here for our use and benefit. we have dominion over them.
i think this is a cunning biblical trick. an even newer testament would surely prohibit the eating of flesh
"Use and benefit" also requires care. Wise people don't destroy that upon which they depend.
AND, for all the talk of preservationists ... the species that are definitely NOT endangered are cows, sheep --aka livestock upon which we have come to depend.
khazalid wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:khazalid wrote:in biblical terms of course, the animals are here for our use and benefit. we have dominion over them.
i think this is a cunning biblical trick. an even newer testament would surely prohibit the eating of flesh
"Use and benefit" also requires care. Wise people don't destroy that upon which they depend.
AND, for all the talk of preservationists ... the species that are definitely NOT endangered are cows, sheep --aka livestock upon which we have come to depend.
actually, there is no biblical imperative to 'care' for the animals at all. being a veggie i'd be inclined to agree with you, but the point is one of cultural relativity, which is worth noting
PLAYER57832 wrote:_sabotage_ wrote:
I am not using the Bible to back up my point, I'm only presenting what the opponents of intelligent design propose.
No, you are only presenting a small portion of what some people say.
hotfire wrote:so if that same dump truck driver spills coffee while driving down the road will that coffee leave a trail behind on the road to follow or a puddle in his cab only?
universalchiro wrote:hotfire wrote:so if that same dump truck driver spills coffee while driving down the road will that coffee leave a trail behind on the road to follow or a puddle in his cab only?
Amazon deposits 1100 X 10exp6 tons of sediment each year.
The continents are moving at 1.5inches per year,
If the continents drifted apart from Pangaea some 120 million years ago, you bet there would be a trail. The logic is unassailable.
So using your analogy, you are aiding my point. For if the driver of the dump truck is traveling slow enough, there will be a trail. But since there is no trail, then the driver of the dump truck drove faster in the past and has slowed to a crawl of 1.5 inches per year.
To argue for the lack of sediment deposit on the ocean floor because there was no rivers, is silly. I know you didn't pose this, but another person did.
universalchiro wrote:hotfire wrote:so if that same dump truck driver spills coffee while driving down the road will that coffee leave a trail behind on the road to follow or a puddle in his cab only?
Amazon deposits 1100 X 10exp6 tons of sediment each year.
The continents are moving at 1.5inches per year,
If the continents drifted apart from Pangaea some 120 million years ago, you bet there would be a trail. The logic is unassailable.
So using your analogy, you are aiding my point. For if the driver of the dump truck is traveling slow enough, there will be a trail. But since there is no trail, then the driver of the dump truck drove faster in the past and has slowed to a crawl of 1.5 inches per year.
To argue for the lack of sediment deposit on the ocean floor because there was no rivers, is silly. I know you didn't pose this, but another person did.
universalchiro wrote:hotfire wrote:so if that same dump truck driver spills coffee while driving down the road will that coffee leave a trail behind on the road to follow or a puddle in his cab only?
Amazon deposits 1100 X 10exp6 tons of sediment each year.
The continents are moving at 1.5inches per year,
If the continents drifted apart from Pangaea some 120 million years ago, you bet there would be a trail. The logic is unassailable.
So using your analogy, you are aiding my point. For if the driver of the dump truck is traveling slow enough, there will be a trail. But since there is no trail, then the driver of the dump truck drove faster in the past and has slowed to a crawl of 1.5 inches per year.
To argue for the lack of sediment deposit on the ocean floor because there was no rivers, is silly. I know you didn't pose this, but another person did.
universalchiro wrote:The mouths of all rivers from around the globe, only have approximately 4,500 years worth of deposits. If the Continents were formed 120 million years ago as evolutionist believe, then why aren't there a sufficient amount of sediment deposits flowing from the mouths of rivers into the oceans/gulfs/seas to support this very old age. Why is there only about 4,500 years worth of sediment deposits?
In addition, as the continents broke apart and South America broke apart from Africa, why doesn't the amazon leave a trail of deposit? And like wise the Mississippi river as well?
AndyDufresne wrote:BBS, what proof do you have that subduction zones exist? I mean, I understand that abduction zones exist, but your wishy washy dirt moving under other dirt? This isn't a high fantasy realm we live in with elves and dwarves and oompa loompas.
--Andy
AndyDufresne wrote:BBS, what proof do you have that subduction zones exist? I mean, I understand that abduction zones exist, but your wishy washy dirt moving under other dirt? This isn't a high fantasy realm we live in with elves and dwarves and oompa loompas.
--Andy
AndyDufresne wrote:BBS, what proof do you have that subduction zones exist? I mean, I understand that abduction zones exist, but your wishy washy dirt moving under other dirt? This isn't a high fantasy realm we live in with elves and dwarves and oompa loompas.
--Andy
AndyDufresne wrote:BBS, what proof do you have that subduction zones exist? I mean, I understand that abduction zones exist, but your wishy washy dirt moving under other dirt? This isn't a high fantasy realm we live in with elves and dwarves and oompa loompas.
--Andy
AndyDufresne wrote:BBS, what proof do you have that subduction zones exist? I mean, I understand that abduction zones exist, but your wishy washy dirt moving under other dirt? This isn't a high fantasy realm we live in with elves and dwarves and oompa loompas.
--Andy
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