How do you know that the event happened 70 million yrs ago. The geographic column is a non starter since it's just based on circluar reasoning, fossils date the rocks the rocks date the fossils. The so called column can be interpreated differently as the effects of a global flood therefore layers wouldn't equal huge time periods. The column is nothing more than a hypothetical classification scheme based on selected rock outcrops in Europe, and used flexibly to classify rocks around the world.
This is a typical no-win situation in this debate because we are looking at it from different viewpoints. I don't see it being difficult to interpret the geologic column. Oldest latyers are usually the lowest and the upper layers are youngest (assuming no shifts or tilts). We look at the lowest rock and we find simple organisms (simple multicellular and single cell). As we go up we see sponges, early arthropods, crinoids, armored fish. Going further we see early dinosaurs and insects. Towards the top we have mammals and then only at the top do we see humans. Yes there is erosion and tectonics and some of the layers will be shifted or moved. But these rocks were laid down in sequential order (that had to). And since they progress from very simple to more advanced, this implies age. Not to mention that the layers correlate very well no matter where in the world you are (as continents are usually composed of the same rocks). You also see rocks of different origins stacked up on top of each other. You have limestone topped with shale, then conglomerate, a coal seam, and then limestone again. A flood would never leave layers like this... they would be sorted due to settling rates and so would the animals.
You cannot arugue that evolutionists created the geologic record because this was done before Darwin and Wallace came up with evolution. There was no Old Earth bias. They were doing the scientific method correctly. Observing the evidence, interpreting it, and coming up with a hypothesis. Isn't it interesting that they most likely all had a Biblical view of the world and whatever they saw that day made them question it. The evidence must point away from a global flood if these early scientists were swayed by the evidence. Of course we today speak with bias but they didn't back then since evolution and old Earth wasn't well known.
I don't get this. How could you possibly know that? There is such a mix of animals on the earth now and oit seems to be doing a stella job!
This was one of my main points... We have our assemblage of animals and plants on Earth today that the Earth clearly can handle. But look to the fossil record and there are many times more creatures that are extinct. To make them all fit into a creationist timescale, you would have to squeeze billions of years of species into a timespan of a few thousand years. The Earth could not support many more species than we have today so it is not possible to squeeze more in (in the past) and maintain the biosphere. Plus God told Noah to take a pair of every animal on Earth so you cannot say the Post-Flood animal fauna was drastically different. The same animal diversity should have left the Ark as got on.
Again you assume that there has to be a layer for the global flood but under the global flood notion most layers were created by the flood anyway. Large-scale catastrophic plate tectonics alter the earth and some mass graves will never be found since they are so deeply placed by rock flows or tectonics.
Yes they would but with hydrodynamic sorting. If you assume layers from the Permian to the Cretaceous were "flood deposits" you should see sorting since inorganic particles do not have "differential escape". The catastrophic flooding and fountaining would occurr and the suspended sediment would settle out according to gravity. Evben if they were distrubed multiple times, the sediment would still settle in the same pattern. Plus you would see animals and plants mixed together with no apparent chronological order (as in trilobites with mammals). You don't see a little problem with never seeing that?
There is no evidence for "fast plate tectonics". This is another thing made up to make the flood story work (see the old Vapor Canopy model). All plate movement today is very slow and it all leaves marks in the crust. Wouldn't speedy plates leave some sort of record of this fast movement? Imagine India impacting Asia at 100m/s! That is just humurous, there would be rock through halfway across Asia from the collision and there would be tons of metamorphic deposits from the shock/hea/pressure of the impact. Not to mention that runaway subduction would drastically increase the temperature of the Earth and boil the oceans off. I see slow plate tectonics, so therefore that's what I believe.
In the global flood model the iceage happened after the flood. Plus just because we don't see them die together doesn't mean they didn't live together. Again your assuming that there is a particular layer for when the flood happened and we should therefore find these animals in that one layer cross the world but under a global flood hypothesis we wouldn't expect that.
If the Ice Age happened after the flood (~2000 BC), where is the record of this in human civilization? The rise of the Mesopotamian, Chinese, and Egyptian civilizations was around then and farming was becoming more common. An Ice Age would put a serious damper on the rise of civilization. Not to mention that there were no sabre-tooth cats and mammoths into historical times. The Middle Age "little Ice Age" was not the real Ice Age. And ice cores show us that there were several consectutive Ice Ages interrupted by warm spells. Where is all the time to fit this in a YEC timescale?
I talked about the second half already, even if all the rock strata were layed down in one year you would expect to find creatures mixed together. The ages don't matter... if they lived at the same time in the same habitat, they should have died together.
In reference to 5. large scale plate tectonics would cause lanslides ect at speeds of 50-100m/s.
I touched on this above. You can say anything because no one can go back and prove it. I go on observations taken over recorded history and I see nothing but slow tectonics. I don't see how water, even in huge quantities, can upset tectonics so much that is goes that fast. Again, people can make this stuff up and say it's true but no one can ever test it (therefore it's not science).
In reference to 4. Maybe mot t-rex were placed around what today is north-america on the 'pangea' continent.
Maybe, but it's more likey that T-rex were isolated by being surrounded by water, meaning they were on a different continent. Look at today's megafauna. Species are isolated by some sort of barrier. Unless the humans fenced off T-rex. haha
7. maybe an option would be that there were lanslide events caused by the beginning of the global flood and they didn't have time to get to high ground
6. Maybe the fountains of the deep didn't affect them directly but probably tsunamis would have been created easily spilling on to land affecting land animals.
Yes, both of these are plausible and very likely to occur but these also occurred on a old Earth timescale and these same processes could have killed animals. In order to use this on a YEC Flood timescale you have to eliminate the myriad of other problems going on (see page 1).