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- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!news.service.uci.edu!ucivax!bvickers
- From: bvickers@valentine.ics.uci.edu (Brett J. Vickers)
- Subject: Re: Voyagers on the Ark of Noah
- Nntp-Posting-Host: valentine.ics.uci.edu
- Message-ID: <2B6440E8.29518@ics.uci.edu>
- Newsgroups: talk.origins
- Reply-To: bvickers@ics.uci.edu (Brett J. Vickers)
- Organization: Univ. of Calif., Irvine, Info. & Computer Sci. Dept.
- Lines: 319
- Date: 25 Jan 93 19:35:05 GMT
- References: <C0MF7z.DDE@gpu.utcs.utoronto.ca> <1993Jan12.202852.12010@anasazi.com> <1993Jan25.122107.1@woods.ulowell.edu>
-
- Since Ray Cote indicates that he believes the Ark story is feasible,
- maybe he can answer the following questions from Mark Issak's
- fantastic Ark FAQ. I'm not holding my breath. Neither should you.
-
- ===============================================================================
- Author: Mark Isaak
- Title: Problems with a Global Flood and Noah's Ark
- Date: Nov. 2, 1992
- ===============================================================================
-
- Problems With a Global Flood
- version 1.4, last modified 9/30/92
-
- Creationist models are often criticized for being too vague to have any
- predictive value. A literal interpretation of the Flood story in Genesis,
- however, does imply certain physical consequences which can be tested
- against what we actually observe. Most, if not all, observations, discredit
- the flood hypothesis, as you can see from what follows. Can any
- Creationists address even half of the points in this list?
-
- The ark:
- How did the ark even get _built_ before its frame decays? Tim LaHaye and
- Henry Morris assure us that Noah and his three sons could have
- easily constructed the ark in only 81 years. Builders of wooden
- ships whose work took only four or five years often faced the
- problem of earlier phases of their work rotting away. And does the
- 81 year figure include harvesting and shaping lumber, building
- workshops, scaffolds, cages, etc., and gathering animals and
- provisions?
- How was the ark made seaworthy? The longest wooden ships in modern seas
- are about 300 feet, and these require reinforcing with iron straps
- and leak so badly they must be constantly pumped.
- How were animals collected from all over the world?
-
- Life on the ark:
- How did all the different species fit on the ark? 10 million species is a
- reasonable estimate [May, 1992]. If you hypothesize significantly
- fewer than that on the ark, you must explain evolution rates faster
- than any evolutionists propose to account for all the present
- species.
- How did Noah supply food and water for all the animals for a year?
- What did the carnivorous animals eat, especially those which require fresh
- meat?
- How did creatures needing special environments survive on the ark?
- How do you explain how all host-specific parasites/diseases made do with
- only one pair of hosts (and if they did OK, how the hosts survived!)
- How well ventilated was the ark? The body heat from millions of closely
- packed animals must have been very intense.
-
- The flood:
- Where did the water come from? (It would take 4.4 billion cubic
- kilometers to cover Mt. Everest.)
- Where did it go?
-
- Geological effects of the flood:
- How were mountains formed? Many very tall mountains are composed of
- sedimentary rocks. If these were laid down during the flood, how
- did they reach their present height, and when were the valleys
- between them eroded away?
- How does a global flood explain angular unconformities, where one set of
- layers of sediments have been extensively modified (e.g., tilted)
- and eroded before a second set of layers were deposited on top?
- They thus seem to require at least two periods of deposition (more,
- where there is more than one unconformity) with long periods of time
- in between.
- How was the fossil record sorted in an order convenient for evolution?
- Ecological zonation fails to explain:
- (1) the extremely good sorting observed. Why didn't at least one
- dinosaur make it to the high ground with the elephants?
- (2) the relative positions of plants and other non-motile life.
- (3) why some groups of organisms, such as mollusks, are found in
- many geologic strata.
- (4) why extinct animals which lived in the same niches as present
- animals didn't survive as well. Why did no pterodons make it to high
- ground?
- How can a single flood be responsible for such extensively detailed
- layering? One formation is six kilometers thick. If we grant 400
- days for this to settle, and ignore possible compaction since the
- flood, we still have 15 meters of sediment settling *per day*. And
- yet despite this, the chemical properties of the rock are neatly
- layered, with great changes (e.g.) in percent carbonate occurring
- within a few centimeters in the vertical direction. How does such a
- neat sorting process occur in the violent context of a universal
- flood dropping 15 meters of sediment per day? How can you explain a
- thin layer of high carbonate sediment being deposited over an area
- of ten thousand square kilometers for some thirty minutes, followed
- by thirty minutes of low carbonate deposition, followed by thirty
- minutes more of .... well, I think you get the picture. [From: Bill
- Hyde; see also Kent & Olsen, 1992]
- How do you explain the formation of varves? The Green River formation
- in Wyoming contains 20,000,000 annual layers, or varves,
- identical to those being laid down today in certain lakes.
- [From: bill@bessel.as.utexas.edu (William H. Jefferys); see also
- Short et. al, 1991]
- How do you explain worldwide agreement between "apparent" geological eras
- and radiometric dating methods?
- Why is there no evidence of a flood in ice core series?
- Deep in the geologic column there are formations which could have
- originated only on the surface, such as footprints, rain drops,
- river channels, wind-blown dunes, beaches, and glacial deposits.
- How could these have appeared in the midst of a catastrophic flood?
- How do you explain the relative ages of mountains? Why weren't the Sierra
- Nevadas eroded as much as the Appalacians during the flood?
- How do you explain Fossil remineralization - the replacement of the
- original material with a different mineral?
- * Buried skeletal remains of modern fauna are negligibly
- remineralized, including some that biblical archaeology says are
- quite old - a substantial fraction of the age of the earth in this
- diluvian geology. For example, remains of Egyptian commoners
- buried near the time of Moses aren't extensively remineralized.
- * Buried skeletal remains of extinct mammalian fauna show quite
- variable remineralization.
- * Dinosaur remains are often extensively remineralized.
- * Trilobite remains are usually remineralized - and in different
- sites, fossils of the same species are composed of different
- materials.
- How are these observations explained by a sorted deposition of
- remains in a single episode of global flooding?
- [From: jjh00@outs.ccc.amdahl.com (Joel J. Hanes)]
- How could the flood deposit layers of solid salt --- sometimes meters in
- width. This apparently occurs when a body of salt water has its
- fresh-water intake cut off, and then evaporates. These layers can
- occur more or less at random times in the geological history, and
- have characteristic fossils on either side. Therefore, if the
- fossils were themselves laid down during a catastrophic flood, there
- are, it seems, only two choices:
- (1) the salt layers were themselves laid down at the same time,
- during the heavy rains that began the flooding, or
- (2) the salt is a later intrusion.
- I suspect that both will prove insuperable difficulties for a theory
- of flood deposition of the geologic column and its fossils.
- [From: marlowe@paul.rutgers.edu (Thomas Marlowe)]
- How were hematite layers laid down? Standard theory is that they were
- laid down before Earth's atmosphere contained much oxygen. In an
- oxygen-rich regime, they would almost certainly be impossible.
- How are the polar ice caps possible? Such a mass of water as the flood
- would have provided sufficient buoyancy to float the polar caps off
- their beds. No way to drop them _exactly_ back onto their original
- location, _or_ to regrow them. (In fact, the Greenland ice cap
- would _not_ regrow under modern (last 10 ky) climatic conditions.)
- [From: Bob Grumbine rmg3@psuvm.psu.edu]
- Finally, remember that the geological column and the relative dates
- therein were laid out by _creationists_ before Darwin even
- formulated his theory.
-
- Biological effects of the flood:
- How do you explain the survival of any sensitive marine life (e.g.,
- coral)? Since most coral are found in shallow water, the turbidity
- created by the runoff from the land would effectively cut them off
- from the sun. The silt would cover the reef after the rains were
- over, and the coral would ALL DIE. By the way, the rates at which
- coral deposits calcium are well known, and some highly mature reefs
- (such a the great barrier) have been around for MILLIONS of years to
- be deposited to their observed thickness. [From: bmb@bluemoon.rn.com]
- How did _all_ the fish survive? Some require cool clear water, some need
- brackish water, some need ocean water, some need water even saltier.
- A flood would have destroyed at least some of these habitats.
- How did all the modern plant species survive? Many plants (seeds and all)
- would be killed by being submerged for a few months.
- Why is there no evidence of a flood in tree ring dating?
- How does the flood explain the geological sorting of pollen? Fossil
- pollen is one of the more important indicators of different levels
- of strata. Each plant has different and distinct pollen, and, by
- telling which plants produced the fossil pollen, it is easy to see
- what the climate was like in different strata. Was the pollen
- hydraulically sorted by the flood water so that the climatic evidence
- is different for each layer?
- How could a one-year flood deposit the following: "In Yellowstone Park
- there is a stratigraphic section of 2000 feet exposed which shows 18
- successive petrified forests. Each forest grew to maturity before
- it was wiped out with a lava flow." [J. Laurence Kulp, quoted in
- Strahler, _Science and Earth History_, pp 221-224.]
- How does a flood explain the accuracy of "coral clocks"? The moon is
- slowly sapping the earth's rotational energy. The earth should have
- rotated more quickly in the distant past, meaning that a day would
- have been less than 24 hours, and there would have been more days
- per year. Corals can be dated by the number of "daily" growth
- layers per "annual" growth layer. Devonian corals, for example,
- show nearly 400 days per year. There is an exceedingly strong
- correlation between the "supposed age" of a wide range of fossils
- (corals, stromatolites, and a few others -- collected from geologic
- formations throughout the column and from locations all over the
- world) and the number of days per year that their growth pattern
- shows. The agreement between these clocks, and radiometric dating,
- and the theory of superposition... is a little hard to explain away
- as the result of a number of unlucky coincidences in a 300-day-long
- flood. [From: stassen@alc.com (Chris Stassen)]
- If a single flood is responsible for all fossils, where were all those
- animals when they were alive? From "Six 'Flood' Arguments
- Creationists Can't Answer" by Robert Schadewald,
- _Creation/Evolution_ IV (Summer 1982), pp. 12-13:
- "Scientific creationists interpret the fossils found in the earth's
- rocks as the remains of animals that perished in the Noachian
- Deluge. Ironically, they often cite the sheer number of fossils in
- "fossil graveyards" as evidence for the Flood. In particular,
- creationists seem enamored by the Karroo Formation in Africa, which
- is estimated to contain the remains of 800 billion vertebrate
- animals (see Whitcomb and Morris, p. 160; Gish, p. 61). As
- pseudoscientists, creationists dare not test this major hypothesis
- that all of the fossilized animals died in the Flood.
- "Robert E. Sloan, a paleontologist at the University of Minnesota,
- has studied the Karroo Formation. He asserts that the animals
- fossilized there range from the size of a small lizard to the size
- of a cow, with the average animal perhaps the size of a fox. A
- minute's work with a calculator shows that, if the 800 billion
- animals in the Karoo formation could be resurrected, there would be
- twenty-one of them for every acre of land on earth. Suppose we
- assume (conservatively, I think) that the Karroo Formation contains
- 1 percent of the vertebrate fossils on earth [land fossils
- only--whj]. Then when the Flood began, there must have been at least
- 2100 living animals per acre, ranging from tiny shrews to immense
- dinosaurs. To a noncreationist mind, that seems a bit crowded."
- A thousand kilometers' length of arctic coastal plain, according
- to experts in Leningrad [N. Newell, _Creation and Evolution_; 1982,
- Columbia U. Press, p. 62], contains about 500,000 *tons* of tusks.
- Even assuming that the entire population was preserved, you seem to
- be saying that Russia had wall-to-wall mammoths before this "event."
-
- Historical effects of the flood:
- Why is there no mention of the flood in the records of Egyptian or Chinese
- civilizations which existed at the time?
- Biblical dates (I Kings 6:1, Gal 3:17, various generation lengths
- given in Genesis) place the flood 1300 years before Solomon began
- the first temple. We can construct reliable chronologies for near
- Eastern history, particularly for Egypt, from many kinds of records
- from the literate cultures in the near East. These records are
- independent of, but supported by, dating methods such as
- dendrochronology and carbon-14. The building of the first temple
- can be dated to 950 B.C. +/- some small delta, placing the Flood
- around 2250 B.C. Unfortunately, the Egyptians (among others) have
- written records dating well back before 2250 B.C. (the Great
- Pyramid, for example dates to the 26th century B.C., 300 years
- before the Biblical date for the Flood). No sign in Egyptian
- inscriptions of this global flood around 2250 B.C.
-
- Aftermath of the flood:
- How did marsupials get back to Australia? And why are so many marsupials
- limited to Australia; why are there no wallabies in Indonesia? The
- same argument applies to any number of groups of animals.
- How do you explain the genetic variation in all populations today?
- How did all of the animals survive after being unloaded from the Ark? All
- of the predators at the top of the food pyramid require larger
- numbers of food animals beneath them on the pyramid, which in turn
- require large numbers of the animals they prey on, and so on, down
- to the primary producers (plants...etc.) at the bottom. How would
- "pairs" of animals get enough food from what must have been a
- limited supply of plants and animals?
-
- Is the flood model consistent with the Bible?
- The model seems to say that large numbers of kinds of land animals
- became extinct because of the flood, while Genesis repeatedly says
- that Noah was ordered to take a representative sample of all kinds of
- land animals on the Ark to save them from extinction, and that Noah
- did as ordered. Which is right?
- How could Noah have gathered male and female of each kind when some
- species are asexual, others are parthenogenic and have only females,
- and others (such as earthworms) are hermaphrodites? And what about
- social animals like ants and termites which need the whole nest to
- survive?
- Other civilizations have flood legends, too. This is often given as
- evidence for the flood, but doesn't it mean that more people than
- Noah's family survived?
- What was used to waterproof the ark? We are told that God instructed Noah
- to coat the ark with pitch inside and out with the naturally-
- occurring hydrocarbon pitch, which causes a bit of a problem since,
- according to Whitcomb and Morris, all oil, tar and coal deposits
- were formed when organic matter was buried DURING the flood.
- Does the flood story make the whole Bible less credible?
- Davis Young is a working geologist who also is an Evangelical
- Christian. He has personal doubts about some aspects of evolution,
- but he makes a devastating case against "Flood Geology." He writes
- (_Christianity and the Age of the Earth_, p. 163):
- "The maintenance of modern creationism and Flood geology not only is
- useless apologetically with unbelieving scientists, it is harmful.
- Although many who have no scientific training have been swayed by
- creationist arguments, the unbelieving scientist will reason that a
- Christianity that believes in such nonsense must be a religion not
- worthy of his interest...Modern creationism in this sense is
- apologetically and evangelistically ineffective. It could even be a
- hindrance to the gospel.
- "Another possible danger is that in presenting the gospel to the
- lost and in defending God's truth we ourselves will seem to be
- false. It is time for Christian people to recognize that the defense
- of this modern, young-Earth, Flood-geology creationism is simply not
- truthful. It is simply not in accord with the facts that God has
- given. Creationism must be abandoned by Christians before harm is
- done...."
- [From: bill@bessel.as.utexas.edu (William H. Jefferys) See also
- Young, 19??]
- If God is omnipotent, why not kill what He wanted killed directly?
- And the whole idea was to rid the wicked people from the world. Did it work?
-
- Notes:
-
- Kent and Olsen (Columbia University Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory)
- Discover, Jan. 1992
-
- May, Robert M. "How Many Species Inhabit the Earth?" Scientific American,
- 267:4 (Oct. 1992), 42-49.
-
- "Creation/Evolution" Issue #11, Winter 1983, "The Impossible Voyage of
- Noah's Ark" by Robert A. Moore, pp. 1-43. The entire issue is
- about the ark. Moore lists over one hundred references.
-
- Short, D. A., J. G. Mengel, T. J. Crowley, W. T. Hyde and G. R. North 1991:
- Filtering of Milankovitch Cycles by Earth's Geography. Quaternary
- Research. 35, 157-173.
-
- Davis Young: _Christianity and the Age of the Earth_. Now published by
- Artisan Sales, POB 2497, Thousand Oaks CA 91360. Single copies (at
- last report) were $8.50 postpaid, and in lots of 10 or more,
- $4.50/copy.
-
- Re frozen mammoths as evidence of a catastrophy:
- Farrand, Wm. R.;_Science_, 133:729-735, March 17, 1961
-
- --
- Brett J. Vickers
- bvickers@ics.uci.edu
-