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Page 13 of 26 (312 Articles)
Sandy surprise
When most people look at huge sandstone cliffs, for example, they are conditioned in today’s culture to think in terms of millions of years. But this swimming pool owner, from hard experience, knows you don’t need the millions of years.
by n/a
That choking feeling …
by NA
Australia: The Time Traveller’s Guide
ABC Mythology
by Tas Walker
Plate tectonics—inconsistencies in the model
Just like the subject matter under investigation, opinions shift about in regards to plate tectonics.
by Mark McGuire
Plenty of time
For oil reserves, for distant starlight to reach the earth, and for God (who created time)
by Jonathan Sarfati and David Catchpoole
Immense impacts or big belches?
Long-age evolutionary interpretations of the 'fossil record' result in evolutionists having to explain various 'mass extinctions' (including the demise of the dinosaurs) in the distant past, e.g. via asteroid impacts, or explosive vulcanism. But there's a much more straightforward answer.
by Carl Wieland
The meaning of unconformities
How does Noah’s Flood provide a better framework for understanding unconformities?
by John K. Reed and Michael J. Oard
Mollie Kathleen’s Marvellous Mysteries
Fast-forming stalactites and stalagmites are clear evidence against long ages.
by Gary Livesay
Solar activity, cold European winters, and the Little Ice Age
A concept known as the charge modulation of aerosol scavenging (CMAS) may help researchers unearth the causes of severe European winters.
by Jake Hebert
Mineral evolution
What’s next? Geobiology or biogeology?
by Emil Silvestru
Warm early Eocene Antarctica
There was a time when one of the world’s coldest and iciest regions was much warmer.
by Michael J Oard
A river like no other
On Charles Darwin’s Beagle voyage, his geological observations using Charles Lyell’s book reinforced his belief in long ages, and underpinned his later evolutionary ideas. But modern geology denies many of his interpretations.
by Emil Silvestru