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Path: sparky!uunet!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!darwin.sura.net!gatech!concert!duke!news.duke.edu!phy.duke.edu!dgt From: dgt@phy.duke.edu (Dinko Eduardo Gonzalez) Newsgroups: talk.origins Subject: Re: Voyagers on the Ark of Noah Message-ID: <9157@news.duke.edu> Date: 27 Jan 93 20:25:27 GMT References: <C0MF7z.DDE@gpu.utcs.utoronto.ca> <1993Jan13.160901.9720@aurora.com> <1993Jan25.131504.1@woods.ulowell.edu> Sender: news@news.duke.edu Organization: Duke University Physics Dept.; Durham, N.C. Lines: 29 Nntp-Posting-Host: physics.phy.duke.edu In a previous posting I wrote: > [..] >what about plants? There is no mention of them in the Noah story, and >they surely must have died in a flood, deprived of sunlight and >nutrients. [..] and Eric Sotnak answered: Don't be so dense. Just like the animals, they came to Noah. God said to the plants "go to Noah" and they just uprooted themselves and marched their way to the ark. Sheesh, it's so simple. Oh, as for how they stayed alive in the ark, the answer is obvious -- God did it. -- ******************************************************************** Eric Sotnak | One life. esot@troi.cc.rochester.edu | One chance. _________________________*********______________________________________________ To this I answer: Gosh! I thought crab grass was the only plant capable of walk, you know, picture them taking hesitant steps on their feeble stem/legs in their journey toward the awesome 300 m long ark. What a sight! I should have thought about this before! -- Dinko Gonzalez Trotter dgt@phy.duke.edu