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Page 18 of 27 (314 Articles)
The age of the Jenolan Caves, Australia
The long and tortuous uniformitarian history for these caves is riddled with difficulties.
by Emil Silvestru
How did the waters of Noah’s Flood drain off the continents?
How did they drain off the continents?
by Mike Oard
Many arches and natural bridges likely from the Flood
The origin of these spectacular landforms is an enigma for long-age geology.
by Michael J. Oard
Post-Flood log mats potentially can explain biogeography
Animals dispersing around the world by either land bridges or rafting is accepted by both creationists and secularists.
by Michael J Oard
The rock cycle
Is it a valid concept
by tas walker
Canyon creation
Fast-forming canyons show that textbook pictures of slow and gradual processes are really just storytelling.
by Rebecca Gibson
Mammoth—riddle of the Ice Age
These huge creatures are used for evolutionary propaganda, but they can best be explained from a biblical worldview.
by Jonathan Sarfati
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
Plate tectonics—inconsistencies in the model
Just like the subject matter under investigation, opinions shift about in regards to plate tectonics.
by Mark McGuire
The awesome wonder of Wilpena Pound, Australia
How the cataclysm of Noah’s Flood explains it.
by Tas Walker
The lost squadron
WWII fighter planes abandoned on a Greenland glacier were found 50 years later, already under 75 metres of ice.
by Carl Wieland
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