Just to pursue this one more step, suppose that there were pillars which
continued to successfully support the cisterns from which the
subterranean water arose, when the water flowed back, it would carry
immense amounts of soil and such, reducing the cavity volume such that
the flood would not completely subside. Oh by the way, we should be able
to find that water, one would think. I also wonder about the Joule
heating temperature rise just from moving that much water around,
including the phenomenon which caused the water to emerge from the deeps
in the first place, turn into vapor and then rain. Scary!! JimA
Sheila Wilson wrote:
> I had not heard the idea of a layer of mostly water just under the
> surface. I am a geologist and teach hydrogeology at university.
> Obviously, the theory is ridiculous. The theory implies that as the
> water retreated, it went back to its original location because it had
> to go somewhere. The one-time compaction event would destroy the
> space from which it came, with limited similarity to the resurfacing
> of Venus (magma vs. water, of course). As Jim said, even if it were
> possible, the thermal energy release would definitely be mind
> boggling, completely altering the atmosphere. As I said in an earlier
> email, I don't think the laws of physics would allow something of that
> magnitude on earth. I also agree that the chronologies don't mix -
> I've indirectly stated that from the beginning.
>
> With all that in mind, is there any realistic mechanism that would
> release that amount of water? I can't think of any. If we grant the
> flood geology a miracle mechanism and say it happened, how would that
> affect the sediment? I think a global flood that lasted less than two
> years would have limited effects in eroding existing rock. Obviously
> some would occur but I don't know that it would be measurable.
>
> Would a short term global flood of 1/4,500,000,000 cause any noticable
> changes or leave any recognizable changes? What would they be?
> Surely a thin layer of millions of bones of all recent animals would
> be noticable but we don't see that anywhere. What other indications
> would we have?
>
> Sometimes in science, it is important to look at what we would expect
> and what we do or do not find. Obviously, I find this an interesting
> exercise.
>
> Sheila
>
>
> Jim Armstrong <jarmstro@qwest.net> wrote:
>
> Once again, one might start with the very real example of the
> recent tsunami and the damage that resulted from that minor (in
> terms of Earth dimensions) movement of a portion of the earth's
> shell. If that were multiplied in any rational way to get some
> sense of what might happen with surface layers of the Earth
> collapsing into the voids previously occupied by "the waters of
> the deep", I think the whole idea of the living biosphere
> surviving in any semblance of what it was before the collapse
> would be pretty hard to justify, let along the survival of a tiny
> ark. The thermal energy release alone would surely be
> mind-boggling. JimA
>
> D. F. Siemens, Jr. wrote:
>
>> Sheila,
>> You're still talking about 1/4,500,000,000 instead of 1/6000. As
>> for tearing things up, one of the flood geologists has claimed
>> that the great deep was a layer of mostly water under the entire
>> original earth. Its collapse would reduce the diameter of the
>> earth and therefore alter the surface under the universal water.
>> You can't mix the standard geological chronology with flood
>> geology/recent creation chronology and ask an intelligent
>> question of their interaction. There is TOTAL incompatibility.
>> Dave
>>
>> On Fri, 22 Jul 2005 14:06:53 -0700 (PDT) Sheila Wilson
>> <sheila-wilson@sbcglobal.net
>> <mailto:sheila-wilson@sbcglobal.net>> writes:
>>
>> I agree with all the implications and ramifications that you
>> have given. Focusing on the hypothetical question, however,
>> how much of the primordial land (using your term) would have
>> been torn up given an old earth scenario. In other words, if
>> we had a global flood today on our 4.5 billion year old
>> earth, how much different would the topography look? In
>> Genesis, the waters flooded for forty days. Would that have
>> been enough time and power to significantly erode existing
>> rock? Or would the waters rise so quickly that very little
>> erosion would occur?
>>
>> I believe these questions are important in understanding what
>> a geologically instantaneous global flood would do. Many of
>> us agree that a global flood never happened. Others believe
>> that it did. If it did, how much different would the earth's
>> surface look before vs. after. Could we have a global flood
>> without cataclysmic plate shifting, as suggested by
>> Humphreys, Ham, and others? How could cataclysmic plate
>> shifting possibly cause a global flood. I don't believe that
>> it can. I don't think the laws of physics would allow that
>> type of plate shifting, nor do I think the earth has the
>> potential energy to cause it. Even if it could, I don't
>> think the atmosphere, much less a boat of any size, could
>> possibly survive the turbulence created by plate shifting of
>> that magnitude.
>>
>> Venus appears to undergo periodic resurfacing caused by
>> global, cataclysmic volcanic events. The resurfacing is
>> probably a function of cooling and the lack of plate
>> tectonics. Even with that level of deformation, the planet
>> itself appears to remain stable in orbit, rotation, and
>> tilt. How could a flood possibly cause the earth's axis to
>> tilt? I don't think it can.
>>
>> Also, given the geologically instantaneous event and the
>> depth of the water, would enough sediment be created to fill
>> the basins of Wyoming? The depth of sediment there can
>> be measured in miles, not feet. I think the speed at which
>> the proposed global flood occurred would not generate the
>> sediment volume required. A global flood would probably just
>> resort existing sediment more than erode existing rock and
>> a lot of the sediment would end up in the ocean as the water
>> receded.
>>
>> Sheila
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> "D. F. Siemens, Jr." <dfsiemensjr@juno.com> wrote:
>>
>> Sheila,
>> I think you are not taking into account the broader
>> requirements of a global flood less than 6000 years ago.
>> It has to be something that tore up the primordial land
>> and redeposited it in the strata now encountered. That
>> the Flood only lasted a year is, from the standpoint of
>> geological time, virtually nothing. But geological time
>> is absolutely excluded from consideration by all who hold
>> to a global flood. The deluge was, according to flood
>> geology, catastrophic and cataclysmic. One thing possibly
>> suggested as a model is the length of time it took for
>> the atomic bombs to explode over Nagasaki and Hiroshima
>> relative to the extended existence of the cities. But it
>> seems inadequate. Even destruction times duration of the
>> recent tsunami off the Indonesian coast seems
>> relatively close to zero compared to the destruction
>> required and yearlong duration of the Flood.
>>
>> A major problem which we have in analysis is focusing on
>> a single aspect of a greater problem as if it were the
>> crucial and major factor--tunnel vision. There are always
>> ramifications galore.
>> Dave
>>
>> On Fri, 22 Jul 2005 10:47:57 -0700 (PDT) Sheila Wilson
>> <sheila-wilson@sbcglobal.net
>> <mailto:sheila-wilson@sbcglobal.net>> writes:
>>
>> I understand your position but that wasn't my
>> question. My question was, if it did occur, what
>> would we see. Purely hypothetical, no debate on
>> whether or not it happened.
>>
>> These questions came after reading Chris Sharpe's
>> essay on the age of the universe and astromony. One
>> significant point that he made was, if the universe
>> was only 6000 years old, we would not see most the
>> stars because they are too far away. The light
>> didn't have time to get here. So what would the
>> earth look like if a global flood did occur? I don't
>> think we would see any geologic evidence of a global
>> flood as described in Genesis. In geologic time, it
>> was instantaneous. Of course, volcanoes are
>> instantaneous and we can see lots of evidence of
>> them. How deep of sediment layer would we expect?
>>
>> Any ideas?
>>
>> Sheila
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Sheila McGinty Wilson
>> sheila-wilson@sbcglobal.net
>>
>>
>
>
> Sheila McGinty Wilson
> sheila-wilson@sbcglobal.net
Received on Sat Jul 23 11:29:13 2005
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