There is no way to determine after the fact if what appears to be adaptation to an environment is infact design for an environment, in my opinion. I have seen these claims about single ancestor's, but I am not convinced by them. People can study and conclude all they want, but I don't believe there is a way to know that. If it is possible to know that I have never read anything except empty claims.dad wrote: No, from that aspect, I think it's OK. I accept some fast adaptations of creation, because it seems there is evidence for some evolving or adapting. For example the recent article that all cats came from the one ancestor! Why not have just the one ancestor on the ark!?
Also at some point you have to say why so few animals on such an enormous vessel.
Again I have seen this claim, but have seen no evidence as too why they make these assumptions about how much heat would be preoduced in a largely unknown process. If the plates are moving on a molten viscous substance I'm not sure that what they are claiming for frictional heat would be as much as what empty claims propose.Yes, but heat is a problem for all of them that hypothesize a physical only world like the present.
I'm not too sure what effect the spiritual world has on the materials and properties of the physical world, so I don't really know how I feel about that.
AS Walt Brown pointed out, a better fit exists when we look at the mid ocean ridges as the starting point, rather than the continents fitting with each other. Where I differ with him is that he envisioned the seperation as a result of the water coming up, and reducing the friction of the sliding. I feel that the merged past better explains this, because how much friction does merged matter have? What properties that changed at the atomic level may have caused some ease of sliding? We don't really know, but we do know some materials take on superconductive properties, and strange properties under extreme conditions right here and now. Imagine in the merged world!
I think that if one interprets that "pangea" broke apart 100-125 years after the flood, than I might be inclined to agree with the assumption that ridges are in fact speration points. IT is largely an unknown process that is nearly non existent today. I don't know though because topography suggests that only a certian portion of the sea floor is a result of processes at ocean ridges.