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Page 17 of 27 (314 Articles)
The challenge of ancient ice ages answered
When it’s a gigantic underwater landslide formed during Noah’s Flood.
by Michael J. Oard
The Grand Canyon in the thralls of shallow, doctrinaire uniformitarianism
Uncritical rehash of the same set of old arguments that are imagined to nullify Flood geology.
by John Woodmorappe
Changing paradigms in stratigraphy—“a quite different way of analyzing the record”
Understanding the earth’s geological record is undergoing a radical rethink.
by John K. Reed
Did a lake exist under the north-western Laurentide Ice Sheet?
Do sediment cores from Canada’s Great Slave Lake give support to such an idea?
by Michael J. Oard
Coastal great escarpments caused by Flood runoff
On various continents, escarpments stand as a testimony to enormous geological forces.
by Michael J Oard
The Appalachian Mountains are young
The receding waters of Noah’s Flood better explain what shaped geological features such as mountains, valleys and rivers.
by Michael J.Oard
Learning the lessons of Mount St Helens
The catastrophic event that revealed how wrongly geologists understood and explained volcanic landscapes.
by Tas Walker
Noah’s Ark and salvation
Biblical language could not be clearer; Noah’s Flood had to be a global event.
by John Hartnett
Massive erosion on California’s Oroville Dam
Spillway canyon demonstrates power of flowing water
by Tas Walker
The amazing cave people of Malta
Evolutionist indoctrination has led many to link the idea of ‘cave dwelling’ with the notion of ‘primitive subhumans’. But this does not logically follow, as recent evidence confirms.
by Joseph Mizzi and Michael Matthews
Mummified lion cubs in Siberian deep freeze
Juvenile cats frozen in time give unique snapshot of the past.
by Phil Robinson
Precambrian impacts and the Genesis Flood
Are large craters an indication of the energy forces needed to start and sustain the world’s biggest watery catastrophe?
by Michael J. Oard