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Page 24 of 27 (314 Articles)
Rock language: is there such a thing?
Some people say the rocks cry out but others just hear a stony silence.
by Tas Walker
A Witness at the “ends of the earth”
Polynesian preservation: Knowledge of the one true Creator God retained for millennia.
by Adrian Bates
St Hutton’s Hagiography
James Hutton: the pioneering founder of uniformitarian geology? Was he the bold empiricist and rational thinker, who cast aside biblical superstition. Or was this hagiographic revisionism from Playfair and Lyell.
by John Reid
Engineer goes back to school
A 1st-class Honours degree in Geology boosted (not harmed) this young-earth creationist’s confidence in the Bible.
by Don Batten
Loess problems
Loess, generally considered to be wind-blown silt, has caused a number of problems for uniformitarianism.
by Michael J. Oard
Granite formation: catastrophic in its suddenness
Catastrophic in its suddenness.
by Tas Walker
Golden evidence of the Genesis Flood
Ever wondered why water-transported gold nuggets are found on the tops of hills and mountains?
by Jack Lange
The stress/heat flow paradox of the San Andreas Fault, California
What’s wrong with the traditional uniformitarian explanations of the San Andreas Fault?
by Michael J. Oard
Water inside fire
The Beijing anomaly, deep inside the earth, suggests Earth’s history was much different from what is usually envisaged.
by Emil Silvestru
Kata Tjuta: an astonishing story
Kata Tjuta, a famous Australian tourist attraction amazes visitors. Visit the Olgas in Central Australia and discover what is so astonishing.
by Tas Walker
Noah’s long-distance travelers
Well-rounded quartzite boulders, scattered over mountain tops, speak powerfully of the global Flood.
by John Hergenrather
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