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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/6/2006 6:31:19 PM
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bede
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Quasar6 So... Noah built a wooden boat, got on and hoped for the best. Then: The entire earth was literally carpet bombed with massive rocks, which caused all the supervolcano's to let off at the same time. Need I continue? Not that it will do any good. I've been trying to get YEC believers to address the substance of the evidence against them for months and haven't gotten very far. They usually do refer you to YEC sites that have something vaguely to do with what you're talking about, but they won't respond to critiques of the truly ridiculous science you'll find on those sites. I've sometimes tried to get them to address a substantive question, just as a kind of intellecutal Whack-A-Mole game, but eventually I get tired of it. I've now taken to jumping in with links to the most clearly expressed evidence every time I see a YEC say "Both YEC and conventional science address the same evidence. They just interpret it differently." So far, no luck. This is a great thread. And, Unclemonkey, it's hard not to get a little snotty when you meet people who are willing to believe ridiculous theories for the Glory of God. By the way, check out Runaway Subduction. Apparently, in addition to the volcanoes, moving tectonic plates opened up the entire Atlantic seafloor in 40 days. But it's okay, the magma pool was so hot that it boiled seawater directly into space, thus cooling itself off without overheating the atmosphere or the remainder of the ocean. Unclemonkey referred me to that site, too. Pax, Bede
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/6/2006 10:31:35 PM
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shernren
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Quasar6 So... Noah built a wooden boat, got on and hoped for the best. Then: The entire earth was literally carpet bombed with massive rocks, which caused all the supervolcano's to let off at the same time. Not only would such an event burn up the atmospheres supply of oxygen, it would create tidal waves possibly as high as Everest. The massive shockwaves would have torn apart anything exposed, the country-sized lava flows would have fried everything left and to top it all off you are then looking at possibly centuries of nuclear winter because of the global dust cloud. All fine so far... God protected them (sort of demolishes you're "how did the plants survive" theory, though). So they go out into... well, that depends... If the short term aftereffects are still continuing... burning rain, acute radiation poisoning, earthquakes, lava-flows... If the short term stuff has stopped... close to absolute-zero temperatures, total darkness, ash everywhere (volcanic ash is made up of tiny, razor sharp particles, which damage the lungs and eyes, causing blindness and suffocation)... Disease from the corpses everywhere... Need I continue? You forgot to mention how every scrap of land on Earth had been soaked for months in salt water and that the ecosystem preserved on the Ark was top heavy (two lions and fourteen cattle? What gives here?). Without even going into the geological difficulties it's obvious that Planet Earth would be devoid of any reasonably advanced life today if a global flood like the one in Genesis happened, ark with two of each kind or no ark.
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... in discussions of physical problems we ought to begin not from the authority of scriptural passages but from sensory experiences and necessary demonstrations ... Galileo, 1615
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/6/2006 10:37:05 PM
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bede
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Hey, guys, I had a thought. How many of those impact craters are in sedimentary rocks? After all, according to YEC theory, the sedimentary rocks were laid down during the flood, so any meteor craters in them must have happened after the flood. So how many are we talking about? Pax, Bede
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/6/2006 10:43:07 PM
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jmeert
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quote:
ORIGINAL: bede Hey, guys, I had a thought. How many of those impact craters are in sedimentary rocks? After all, according to YEC theory, the sedimentary rocks were laid down during the flood, so any meteor craters in them must have happened after the flood. So how many are we talking about? Pax, Bede Could you head over to my flood geology thread? Exactly WHICH sedimentary rocks were laid down during the flood? Cheers Joe Meert
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/8/2006 7:09:41 AM
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scutus
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And the YECs are where? Come on guys. I want a debate.
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Suo enim quisque studio maxime ducitur. —Cicero, De Finibus, 5.5
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/8/2006 10:07:33 PM
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Quasar6
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Hello! ... Hello! ... Hello! ... Is anybody out there? ... out there? ... out there? ...
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"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former." Albert Einstein "If Americans descended from Europeans, why are there still Australians?" Quasar
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/8/2006 11:33:36 PM
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jw1
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This argument apparently isn't in the YEC FAQ yet.
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/9/2006 9:31:11 PM
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Quasar6
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Wow. We put up an argument that makes sense, has everything to do with the topic, and quite frankly demolishes the YEC theory... and we don't get any answers. I suddenly want to use this argument everywhere. I'd certainly love to use it in a verbal debate, where they can't just ignore it.
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"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former." Albert Einstein "If Americans descended from Europeans, why are there still Australians?" Quasar
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/10/2006 4:22:13 AM
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USincognito
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Say, didn't the Chixulub impact create that boss uniform layer of iridium, at the same stratum level all over the entire world? The "literal" K/T boundry. I wonder how YECists explain that we find this thin layer of highly uncommon material in the same level world wide being caused by a flood somehow. Shouldn't it have been hydrologically sorted out of existance?
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/10/2006 7:53:34 AM
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bede
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quote:
ORIGINAL: USincognito Say, didn't the Chixulub impact create that boss uniform layer of iridium, at the same stratum level all over the entire world? The "literal" K/T boundry. I wonder how YECists explain that we find this thin layer of highly uncommon material in the same level world wide being caused by a flood somehow. Shouldn't it have been hydrologically sorted out of existance? I asked once. I think they said there were meteors involved in the flood. How the dust got deposited in a nice, uniform layer during the chaos of the flood is not explained. Pax, Bede
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/10/2006 8:23:25 AM
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jmeert
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quote:
ORIGINAL: bede quote:
ORIGINAL: USincognito Say, didn't the Chixulub impact create that boss uniform layer of iridium, at the same stratum level all over the entire world? The "literal" K/T boundry. I wonder how YECists explain that we find this thin layer of highly uncommon material in the same level world wide being caused by a flood somehow. Shouldn't it have been hydrologically sorted out of existance? I asked once. I think they said there were meteors involved in the flood. How the dust got deposited in a nice, uniform layer during the chaos of the flood is not explained. Pax, Bede Yet another reason they are loathe to answer questions regarding flood strata. The story makes no sense. Cheers Joe Meert
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/11/2006 4:25:46 AM
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scutus
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Bump.
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/11/2006 7:20:21 PM
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Quasar6
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Double bump.
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"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former." Albert Einstein "If Americans descended from Europeans, why are there still Australians?" Quasar
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/11/2006 10:24:20 PM
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USincognito
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No YECs want to address the Iridium layer that forms a literal K/T boundry? Buehler? Buehler?
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/12/2006 1:01:32 AM
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Quasar6
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I think they don't want to address this thread period. Possibly because it completely demolishes their belief.
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"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former." Albert Einstein "If Americans descended from Europeans, why are there still Australians?" Quasar
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/12/2006 10:39:36 PM
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USincognito
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I'm watching that ABC show with Sally Field and she's still cute in her 60s which reminds me that no Creationist has yet to offer an explanation for the Iridium layer that is the K/T boundry. (Quasar, I think you're right.)
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/12/2006 11:06:23 PM
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iluvatar
Posts: 1925
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quote:
ORIGINAL: USincognito I'm watching that ABC show with Sally Field and she's still cute in her 60s which reminds me that no Creationist has yet to offer an explanation for the Iridium layer that is the K/T boundry. (Quasar, I think you're right.) At first, I thought you meant Sally Struthers and all I could think of was her hoarding all the Cheesy Poofs that were supposed to go to the Ethernopians. -Dan.
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Well, I've been to one world fair, a picnic, and a rodeo, and that's the stupidest thing I ever heard come over a set of earphones.
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/13/2006 6:50:00 PM
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Quasar6
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OK then, in the probably false hope that the YEC's accidently missed this thread... Here's the OP by Scutus: quote:
For those of you who think the world is geologically young e.g. <6000 years. How do you explain meteorite impacts? There are over 150 major impact sites found on Earth, all or most of them dated by geologists to be much, much older than 6000 years. So if the Earth is only 6000 years old, then all 150 major meteorite impacts must have happened since the creation of the world. The combined impacts are powerful enough to destroy all or most multicellular life on Earth. So how did life survive? Can't have happened pre-Fall. Obviously, the Fall was 'perfect' and you can't have apocalyptic, extremely destructive asteroids raining in on your paradise. So some time in the last 6000 years, when man was cast out of Eden and was walking the Earth, the biggest asteroids in Earth's history were impacting. Pff, so what you say? A little asteroid impact can't hurt. Or...can it? The Hiroshima bomb was rated at 15 kilotons of energy and it pulverised the city. The largest nuclear bomb ever made was the Tsar Bomba. It is the most powerful weapon humanity has ever created. It rates at 50 megatons (millions of tonnes of TNT). Nuclear weapons at about 10 megatons or less will utterly destroy any city on Earth. The Chicxulub Crater located on the Yucatan Peninsula is at least partly responsible for the mass extinction at the end of the Late Cretaceous period. The crater is 170 km in diameter. The asteroid that created it was about 10 km in diameter. It struck with the estimated energy of 15 billion Hiroshima bombs. Or about 100 million megatons. Immediately, immense firestorms, titanic tsunamis and indescribably destructive hurricane-force winds (as well as super-hurricanes themselves) swept across the world. The energy released was so great, that the ejecta composed of billions of tonnes of rock and soil rose above the Earth's atmosphere, and covered the world. For up to 2 years, the dust blocked the sunlight. For some time, it was too dark to see anything. Imagine the immense and immediate impact it had on plants that needed photosynthesis. Imagine the impact on the phytoplankton in the seas, the basis of the marine food web. Temperatures dropped below freezing in many places around the world. That was the K-T extinction event. And that was apparently, only 6000 years ago according to YECs. But there were even bigger impact events. The Wilkes Land Crater, found in Antarctica is hypothesised to be an impact crater. It is about 500 km wide. The asteroid that created this crater would need to be six times bigger than the Chicxulub asteroid. It could have contributed to the biggest mass-extinction of all time that occurred in the Permian-Triassic boundary, some 250 million years ago. Using this impact calculator: http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/impacteffects/ I get something around the order of 1.03 x 10^10 MegaTons TNT. But my maths is abhorrent. I don't think it's right. 1.03 x 10^10 is 10 300 000 000, but that can't be right. Distance from Impact: 100.00 km = 62.10 miles Projectile Diameter: 65000.00 m = 213200.00 ft = 40.37 miles Projectile Density: 1500 kg/m3 Impact Velocity: 20.00 km/s = 12.42 miles/s Impact Angle: 45 degrees Target Density: 1500 kg/m3 Target Type: Crystalline Rock Still, I don't even want to think about the apocalyptic effects of this one. If this crater is the real deal of course. But wait. There are more: How about the Vredefort crater? The crater is 300 km wide, nearly double the Chicxulub crater's width. It is the oldest and biggest (verified) crater on Earth. At the least, it is a 100 million megaton event. More likely, it is on the order of twice that, but the impact was so long ago that it is difficult to be certain. The second largest confirmed crater is at Sudbury in Canada. The asteroid that caused it was 10 km in diameter (similar to the K-T extinction event). The crater is 260 km wide. Still yet larger than the Chicxulub crater. It hit nearly 2 billion years ago. These are all extremely large meteorite impacts, yet there are over a hundred other major ones that we can still observe on the Earth's surface. So how do YECs explain all this mass devastation? How did life and more importantly, man survive the repeated impacts of a hundred and fifty major asteroids that released hundreds to tens of millions of megatons? Why have a Flood in the first place? Why not use these asteroids? More info on the apocalyptic nature of just one of these world-screwy-uppy asteroids: http://users.tpg.com.au/users/horsts/climate.htm The effects are GLOBAL. MASS EXTINCTIONS FOR HUNDREDS OF YEARS. We're also forgetting the impacts that hit the sea floor but were subducted under and so we cannot see their craters anymore. That boosts the numbers of impacts up, although by how much can't be said. But consider that most of the planet is covered in water. Here's my first Post: quote:
quote:
Why have a Flood in the first place? Why not use these asteroids? Because we can come up with a way to survive a flood (build a big boat) but we can't come up with a way to survive half the earths surface being turned into a fiery hell hole (after the massive shockwave, which would sythe off just about everything) and a massive dust cloud blocking out all sunlight for a couple years, dropping world temperature to record breaking levels everywhere (this is after the global burning rain, by the way)... Not to mention the tidal-waves, hypercanes (like hurricanes, but more so), radiation, etc... You know, that is a very good question. It also raises philosophical issues about the nature of God. BOOM! BURN! FREEZE! DIE! Hardly the actions of a merciful creator. Here's the next post by Scutus (I'm only putting up the big posts) quote:
Needless to say, this is just one evidence from literally thousands and thousands that go directly against a global Flood. IT NEVER HAPPENED. Geologists would know! 6000 years divided by 170 land meteorite impacts = a meteorite impact every 35 years. So every couple of decades, a big meteorite hits somewhere in the world. Every couple of centuries, a mass-extinction type asteroid hits the Earth. Organisms are set alight, broken in half, drowned, frozen and starved. The Permian asteroid kills off 95% of all living creatures. This is what you get when you spread the asteroid impacts out evenly over 6000 years. But that's not logical. If a major asteroid kept hitting the Earth regularly all the way to the present, we'd know about it. More importantly, the Ancient Egyptians and the Ancient Chinese and the Ancient Indians would have known about it. They lived >3000 years ago. So it must have happened in a short stretch of time when all these ancient civilisations didn't exist, but still after the creation of the Earth. So you're looking at 2000 years of free-time for the asteroids to hit the Earth, without any major civilisations writing about it. Of course, we're forgetting the Australian Aboriginals, who lived in Australia for 60,000 years. And there's a big, BIG (claimed) crater in Australia called the Bedout crater. It is a contender for the mass extinction event at the end of the Permian. The crater is 200 km across. Still bigger than the Chicxulub. You'd think the Australian would notice that earth-shattering asteroid and pass that knowledge down through rock drawings or oral traditions. Of course, there's a high probability that they'd be DEAD. The Bedout impact would be absolutely devastating. So sometime in the last 6000 years, an impact bigger than the one that killed the dinosaurs hit Australia and wiped out the Australian Aboriginals. But sometime in the last 3000 years, new Australian Aboriginals migrated over from some Pacific Islands and colonised their ancient land? Does this make sense AT ALL? Getting back to the main point. Ignoring the Australians, we have 2000 years (at best) of free-time before someone writes or draws about the mass shower of life-ending asteroids. That also brings up the interesting question of why all the asteroids fell in a short stretch of time but not any more. What stopped them? Explain how life survived when all 170 major asteroids hit within a 2000 year stretch. [edit] Actually, lets bump up those 170 asteroids to 300. We're forgetting the ocean-hitting asteroids of course. [edit] And if it hit all at once...not much better. The effects of one mass extinction event is staggering, but add half a dozen more at the same time and...well, game over. quote:
Five impact sites are more than 100 km wide. Including Chicxulub. Twenty impact sites are 40 km or more wide, including the five +100 km craters. Please, oh please. Someone explain this to me. quote:
But wait...it's not only the meteorite impacts that happened in the last 2000 years. It was the SUPERVOLCANOES TOO! And the Deccan Flows! And the Ice Age! And the separation of Pangaea! And then me: quote:
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRGGGGH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! And back to Scutus: quote:
Lets talk a bit about supervolcanoes. Supervolcanoes are volcanoes that produce the biggest sorts of eruption on Earth. These are absolutely titanic eruptions of tens of billions of tonnes of ash, rock and sulphuric acid. It's hard to get your head around the idea of how mind-numbingly powerful these eruptions are compared to normal volcanoes. It's like comparing firecrackers to nuclear weapons. There is a lake in Indonesia, called Toba. It is a supervolcano and it erupted 75,000 years ago. Mount St Helens produced 0.2 cubic kilometres of ash. The largest historical eruption was Tambora. It killed tens of thousands of people and the ash released caused the global climate to swing: quote: The eruption created global climate anomalies in the following years. 1816 became known as the Year Without a Summer because of the extreme weather impact on North America and Europe. The global summer temperature dropped 0.5°C (32.9°F) below average, snows fell in midsummer and Europe experienced an unusually stormy winter. In the Northern Hemisphere, agricultural crops failed and livestock died. It was the worst famine of the century.[3]It produced about 40 cubic kilometres of ash. Mount Toba produced...800 cubic kilometres of ash alone. Its effects on fledgling humanity was devastating to say the least. Even though Toba is in Indonesia, you can find ash all the way over in India that is up to your ankles. In some places, it's 6 metres. The nuclear winter type scenario that resulted from the eruption and the amount of sulphur and ash that would block the sunlight, decreased the global average temperature by 3 to 3.5 degrees for a couple of years. Crops would die. Just one centimetre of ash can ruin agricultural crops in their growing season. Genetic evidence suggests that the human species underwent a severe genetic bottleneck at that time. It's been suggested that between 1000-10000 humans survived the event. We are all descendants of those survivors. Geologists call the amount of matter produced 'magnitude' and the rate of magma eruption 'intensity'. Vesuvius erupted 100,000 cubic metres of magma per second over 24 hours. That is mind-boggling. Yet supervolcanoes can produce a hundred million cubic metres per second. Like I said before, it is hard to even imagine the sheer destructive force that a supervolcano has. So Toba punted humanity to the edge of extinction. Yet it is still small fries to larger supervolcanic eruptions that happened hundreds of thousands of years ago. For example, the Yellowstone Caldera. It measures a staggering 72 kilometres long and 55 kilometres wide. It has undergone three seperate supervolcanic explosions, the most recent of which is 640,000 years ago. In the latest event, 1000 cubic kilometres of material was released. The second eruption sent up 250 cubic kilometres and it was about 1.2 million years ago. The biggest and first eruption produced 2500 cubic kilometres about 2.2 million years ago. All three eruptions sent up vast, vast amounts of ash that covered states as far away as California and Iowa, choking animals and plants to death. All three eruptions would release vast amounts of gases like sulphur dioxide into the atmosphere, affecting the global climate. The effects would be similar to the Toba supervolcano, except even worse. If it happened now, there's a real chance that the human species could be threatened as agriculture collapses and millions (possibly a billion) people die from starvation. Of course, we're forgetting the immediate impacts of the IMMENSE pyroclastic flows that would swallow up all living creatures in their path. Nothing living and I mean nothing, can survive these vast clouds of hot ash that can travel at 100m/s. Gases, dust and ash reflect solar radiation back into space or absorb the heat. Global winter will arrive for years. The Toba eruption alone caused changes in the atmosphere for 6 years, which we can check with ice cores. These are just two supervolcanoes. There are more: quote: Many other supermassive eruptions have also occurred in the geological past. Those listed below measured 7 on the VEI scale. Most of these were larger than Tambora's eruption in 1815, which was the largest eruption in recorded history. * Aira Caldera, Kyûshû, Japan - 22,000 years ago (110 km³) * Aso, Kyûshû, Japan - four large explosive eruptions between 300,000 to 80,000 years ago (Total volume 600 km³) * Kikai Caldera, Ryûkyû Islands, Japan - 6,300 years ago (150 km³ (bulk volume)) * Lake Taupo, North Island, New Zealand - 181 AD (100 km³) * Long Valley Caldera, California, United States - 760,000 years ago (600 km³) * Valle Grande, New Mexico, United States - 1.12 million years ago (~600 km³) * Bruneau-Jarbidge, Idaho, United States - 10-12 million years ago (>250 km³) (responsible for the Ashfall Fossil Beds 1,600 km to the east[1]) How do young earth creationists fit these supervolcano eruptions into 6000 years? And how did humanity survive when they had to contend with massive asteroids too at the same time? And then the first and only YEC reply from Unclemonkey (I'll just mention that neither link had anything to do with the subject matter):quote:
quote:
How do you explain meteorite impacts? Hey, this is a neat thread. True colors are showing all over the place. http://www.answersingenesis.org/docs2004/0524impact.asp http://www.answersingenesis.org/tj/v13/i1/crater.asp Then me againquote:
quote:
Hey, this is a neat thread. True colors are showing all over the place. Well, what do you expect if you just leave us chat among ourselves? PS: Neither of your two links give any explanation whatsoever for how life survived over 170 impacts (If some of them are "Verneshot explosion's", it makes no difference, they'd have much the same effect on life), AND the super-volcano's going off on the other side of the world (Its true, both craters have a period of super-volcanic activity, dated at the same time, on the opposite side of the earth. Its generally believed that the massive seismic waves created by the impact passed around and through the earth, meeting each other on the opposite side and destabilising the local volcanos). This sounds like Armageddon type stuff, but according to you guys it happened at most 6000 years ago (Edit: 4400 years ago, acording to UncleMonkey), and humans survived it. And then... skip a few... me again: quote:
So... Noah built a wooden boat, got on and hoped for the best. Then: The entire earth was literally carpet bombed with massive rocks, which caused all the supervolcano's to let off at the same time. Not only would such an event burn up the atmospheres supply of oxygen, it would create tidal waves possibly as high as Everest. The massive shockwaves would have torn apart anything exposed, the country-sized lava flows would have fried everything left and to top it all off you are then looking at possibly centuries of nuclear winter because of the global dust cloud. All fine so far... God protected them (sort of demolishes you're "how did the plants survive" theory, though). So they go out into... well, that depends... If the short term aftereffects are still continuing... burning rain, acute radiation poisoning, earthquakes, lava-flows... If the short term stuff has stopped... close to absolute-zero temperatures, total darkness, ash everywhere (volcanic ash is made up of tiny, razor sharp particles, which damage the lungs and eyes, causing blindness and suffocation)... Disease from the corpses everywhere... Need I continue? And then all the rest are us trying to get an answer from a YEC! Now can anyone give us a logical reason they believe that all this happened? Or a way it could have happened? Or do we just assume that the YEC position never has been and never will be supported by evidence? Edit: 1 more question... If all this happened during the flood, you know: huge explosions, deadly shockwaves, decade long volcanic winter, AAAARGGGH! BOOM!... the why does the bible say [bland monotone voice] "it rained for forty days and forty nights" [/bland monotone voice] ???
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"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former." Albert Einstein "If Americans descended from Europeans, why are there still Australians?" Quasar
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/14/2006 1:36:18 AM
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scutus
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quote:
True colors are showing all over the place. Indeed they are.
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Suo enim quisque studio maxime ducitur. —Cicero, De Finibus, 5.5
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/14/2006 12:18:19 PM
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CCCdnt
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If I have time I will try to look into this thread. For me to adequately address this will require that I look into some studies done by the secular science world about supposed meteor impacts, techniques that were used to make certain determinations, assumptions involved, etc. This takes time. It may take me a while but I will do this when I can (I did something similar when looking into the Milankovitch theory). I will say that the sarcasm and childish behavior seen in this thread is enough to make one not want to bother even addressing this thread.
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/14/2006 12:57:08 PM
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Plebe
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quote:
ORIGINAL: CCCdnt If I have time I will try to look into this thread. For me to adequately address this will require that I look into some studies done by the secular science world about supposed meteor impacts, techniques that were used to make certain determinations, assumptions involved, etc. This takes time. It may take me a while but I will do this when I can (I did something similar when looking into the Milankovitch theory). I will say that the sarcasm and childish behavior seen in this thread is enough to make one not want to bother even addressing this thread. As a suggestion, read up on Eugene Shoemaker. He was the first person to really push the theory of large meteoric impacts on earth. One of the important observations he made was comparing the rock types (eg shocked quartz) produced by nuclear bomb tests with rocks found around craters. Tektites are also a rock type produced by meteor impacts, and they can be used to date the impact. It is interesting to note that tektites are also associated with craters on the moon.
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/14/2006 7:32:44 PM
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shouldknowbetter
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Now that thing have died down a bit... There is a huge amount of plain in your face common sense data that evidence an old Planet Earth... Tectonic plates are measured in there motions, geological and archeaolgical digs some the past in ever focusing detail. The formation Hawaii which is still ongoing, even stands as a constant testimoney of an Old Planet... That is but the smallest wee bit of the tip of the evidience iceburg. So a simple "the Bibles says so" is not an adequate response. IMHO it's not even a corrext response because more than not the meaning is "I say the Bible says so". I don't see it... I see the Bible as referring to a localized event is you relly get literal and set aside the presuppositions.
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Seek Wisdom from God in prayer and scripture
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/15/2006 2:11:58 AM
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scutus
Posts: 375
Joined: 10/30/2006
From: Sydney, Australia
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quote:
I will say that the sarcasm and childish behavior seen in this thread is enough to make one not want to bother even addressing this thread. We're just having a little fun. I wouldn't be poking fun at the YECs if only they actually attempted to address the OP. They're posting everywhere else but ignoring this thread. If they don't know, be honest about it and say it. We're all looking for the truth aren't we?
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Suo enim quisque studio maxime ducitur. —Cicero, De Finibus, 5.5
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RE: Meteorite Impacts - 11/15/2006 5:13:09 AM
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scutus
Posts: 375
Joined: 10/30/2006
From: Sydney, Australia
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In combination with multiple supervolcanoes and 100+ massive meteorites, lets discuss large outpourings of basalt lava. For example, the Deccan Traps in India is a region that came about due to volcanism in the Late Cretaceous. Due to what's called a 'hot plume' from deep within the Earth's interior, a vast amount of lava and sulfur gas was released from these outpourings, changing the global climate rapidly (in geologic terms), covering the Earth in a shroud of darkness and blocking out the sunlight and perhaps contributing to the mass-extinction at the end of the Cretaceous. The lava may have covered as much as 1.5 million square kilometres originally, which is slightly more than the area of the Northern Territory, one of Australia's states (technically a territory, but no one cares). Perhaps even more than that. The lava flows were up to 2 km deep in places. There's an ever bigger volcanic event called the Siberian Traps which are a lot older, dating back to the Permian and probably contributed to the largest mass-extinction on Earth, the P-T extinction event. The estimates for the original coverage of the lava range from 1-4 million square kilometres. Truly vast amounts of lava and gases were released over a period of 1 million years, the most intense and sustained period of volcanic activity on the planet. If Young Earth Creationists want to limit these two volcanic events into only 6000 years, they have to explain how the Traps are cool enough to touch. Residual heat does not disappear that easily. Immediately afterwards the Deccan and Siberian Trap events, global temperatures would have plummeted due to the sulfur aerosols in the atmosphere that would stay for hundreds to thousands of years, and then global temperatures could have increased due to massive emissions of C02 and methane. I think we'd detect that in our CO2 models of global climate for the last few hundred thousand years...but no. About eight outpourings of basalt lava on a large scale have occurred in the past 250 million years. If you want to condense it down to just 6000 years, I'd be happy to...except humans probably wouldn't survive it for many thousands of years afterwards the event. Funny how we're still around without the evidence of massive recent Earth bombardment/volcanism/eruptions! The biggest volcanic eruption in historical times was the Laki volcano: quote:
On the June 8, 1783 a fissure with 130 craters opened explosively at first because of the groundwater interacting with the rising basalt magma. Over time, the eruptions became less explosive, with the style changing from Plinian to Strombolian, and later to Hawaiian with high rates of lava effusion. The eruption, also known as the Skaftá Fires, produced about 15 km³ of basalt lava, and the total volume of tephra emitted was 0.91 km3 [1]. Lava fountains were estimated to have reached 800-1400 m in height. In Scotland, the summer of 1783 was known as the sand-summer, due to ash fallout in Scotland. The gases were carried by the convective eruption column to altitudes of about 15 km. The aerosols built up caused a cooling effect in the Northern Hemisphere, possibly by as much as 1 degree Celsius. quote:
Laki is also known for its atmospheric effects. The convective eruption column of Laki carried gases to altitudes of 15 km. These gases formed aerosols that caused cooling in the Northern Hemisphere, possibly by as much as 1 degree C. This cooling is the largest such volcanic-induced event in historic time. In Iceland, the haze lead to the loss of most of the islands livestock (by eating fluorine contaminated grass), crop failure (by acid rain) and the death of 9,000 people, one-quarter of the human residents (by famine). Laki released 15 km^3 of basalt lava. I'm not sure about the estimated amount of gases. The Deccans released 3 million km^3 of basalt lava. I don't think anyone has calculated the estimated amount of gases, mainly because it was so long ago that we can't be certain. But it must have been massive. Now was this pre-flood or post-flood? If someone can identify the pre-flood strata (just name a current geological age) and the post-flood strata, then I can put a date on the Deccan Trap. But then of course there is the Siberian Traps which modern geologists date to be far older than the Deccans. And the 100+ craters that are covered in sediment also. So the dates will have to correlate with both the Traps and the meteorite craters. And don't forget the supervolcanoes. All the dates have to correlate. So identify the pre-flood strata and the post-flood strata. Pretty please.
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Suo enim quisque studio maxime ducitur. —Cicero, De Finibus, 5.5
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