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Sparking interest in rapid rocks
A ‘spark plug fossil’ has lessons for long-agers.
by Unknown
The origin of laminae in shales
Can they form in moving water, consistent with Noah’s Flood?
by Michael J. Oard
Waterfall formation may not need tectonics or climate change
It may not need tectonics or climate change.
by Michael Oard
Rigid uniformitarianism and a hysterical fear of the scientific creationist bogeyman
Rigid uniformitarianism and a hysterical fear of the scientific creationist bogeyman.
by John Woodmorappe
Fast, fine gemstones
It’s now known that those beautiful crystals on display didn’t need millions of years to form
by Jonathan O’Brien
Gold deposits—formed by the global Flood
New research shows how gold was deposited quickly as hot colloidal liquid at depth, aided by sea water. This is consistent with the Flood and not millions of years.
by Gavin Cox
Cosmic magnets vs long-age dogma
Tetrataenite, a promising alternative to rare-earth magnets, was thought to need millions of years to form, but a lab formed it quickly.
by Jonathan Sarfati
Another one bites the dust
A growing number of rock formations are collapsing in relatively recent times.
by Mark James
Ooids grew rapidly in the Flood
Ooids in the rock record differ to some extent from those that form today. The Flood can explain why.
by Michael J. Oard
Salt magma and sediments interfingered
Current secular theories cannot adequately explain salt formations. What about a high energy, short term event, such as Noah’s Flood?
by Stef J. Heerema and Gert-Jan H.A. van Heugten
‘Ice-rafted’ dropstones from warm-climate cap carbonates?
A conundrum that provides opportunities for explanation in a biblical framework.
by Michael J. Oard