'Flood geology' (also 'creation geology' or 'diluvial geology') is a prominent subset of beliefs under the umbrella of
creationism that assumes the literal truth of a
global flood as described in the
Genesis account of
Noah's Ark. For adherents, the global flood and its aftermath is believed to be the origin of most of the Earth's geological features, including
sedimentary strata,
fossilization,
fossil fuels,
submarine canyons,
salt domes, and frozen
mammoths. As such, flood geology directly contradicts the current conventional theories in
scientific disciplines such as
geology,
evolutionary biology and
paleontology.
Young Earth creationists regard Genesis as providing a historically and scientifically accurate record for the
geological history of the
Earth and believe that there exists evidence that can back up the
historicity of the flood. However, creationist presentations of what they believe is
evidence are routinely dismissed out-of-hand by the
scientific community and as such flood geology is considered
pseudoscience.
History of flood geology
The great flood in the history of geology
The modern science of
geology was founded in
Europe in the
18th century. Its practitioners sought to understand the history and shaping of the Earth through the physical evidence laid down in rocks and minerals. As many early geologists were clergymen, they naturally sought to link the geological history of the world with that set out in the
Bible. The ancient theory that
fossils were the result of "plastic forces" within the Earth's crust had by this time been abandoned, with the recognition that they represented the remains of once-living creatures. This, though, raised a major problem: how did fossils of sea creatures end up on land, or on the tops of mountains?
As early as the
2nd century AD,
Christian thinkers had proposed that fossils represented organisms that were killed and buried during the brief duration of the Flood. This idea became commonly held, aided by the geological peculiarity that much of northern Europe is covered by layers of
loam and
gravel as well as
erratic boulders deposited hundreds of miles from their original sources. This was interpreted as being the result of massive flooding, though it is now known that they are the product of
ice age glaciations (an unknown phenomenon at that time). Prevailing notions of the time held that the global flood was associated with massive geographical upheavals, with old continents sinking and new ones rising, thus transforming ancient seabeds into mountain tops.
During the
Age of Enlightenment, there were significant attempts made to provide natural causes for the
miracles recounted in the Bible.
Natural philosophy explanations for a global flood can be found in such works as ''An Essay Toward a Natural History of the Earth'' (1695) by
John Woodward and ''New Theory of the Earth'' (1696) by Woodward’s student
William Whiston.
[1]
By the early
19th century, however, this view had fallen into disrepute. It was already thought that the Earth's lifespan was far longer than that suggested by literal readings of the Bible (an age of 75,000 years had been suggested as early as
1779, as against the 6,000 years proposed by Archbishop
James Ussher's
famous chronology).
Charles Lyell's promotion of
James Hutton's ideas of
uniformitarianism advocated the principle that geological changes that occurred in the past may be understood by studying present-day phenomena. In common with
Newton, Hutton assumed that the world-system had been in a steady state since the day of creation, but unlike Newton he included in this vision not only the motion of celestial bodies and processes like chemical change on earth, but also processes of geological change. Christopher Kaiser writes:
:''In other words, in comparison with Newton's, Hutton's was a higher order concept of the system of nature which included not only the present structure of the world, but the ''process'' (or
natural history) by which the present structure had come into existence and was maintained. As with Newton, and in contrast to materialists like
Buffon and neomechanists like
Laplace, the ''origins'' of the system were beyond the scope of science for Hutton: in nature itself he found 'no vestige of a beginning - no prospect of an end'. But Hutton came about as close to being a neomechanist as one possibly could without changing the Newtonian framework of God and nature. Only the Newtonian stipulation that God had personally designed the present system of nature stood between natural theology and the retirement of God from science altogether... Like
Derham and
Cotes, Hutton believed that God had implanted active principles in nature at creation sufficient to account for all its natural functions.''
[2]
The idea that ''all'' geological strata were produced by a single flood was rejected in
1837 by the Reverend
William Buckland, the first professor of geology at
Oxford University, who wrote:
:''Some have attempted to ascribe the formation of all the stratified rocks to the effects of the
Mosaic Deluge; an opinion which is irreconcilable with the enormous thickness and almost infinite subdivisions of these strata, and with the numerous and regular successions which they contain of the remains of animals and vegetables, differing more and more widely from existing species, as the strata in which we find them are placed at greater depths. The fact that a large proportion of these remains belong to extinct genera, and almost all of them to extinct species, that lived and multiplied and died on or near the spots where they are now found, shows that the strata in which they occur were deposited slowly and gradually, during long periods of time, and at widely distant intervals.''
[3]
Although Buckland continued for a while to insist that ''some'' geological layers related to the Great Flood, he was forced to abandon this idea as the evidence increasingly indicated multiple inundations which occurred well before humans existed. He was convinced by the
Swiss geologist
Louis Agassiz that much of the evidence on which he relied was in fact the product of ancient ice ages, and became one of the foremost champions of Agassiz's theory of glaciations. Mainstream science gave up on the idea of flood geology, which required major deviations from known physical processes.
Emergence of flood geology
Flood geology was developed as a creationist endeavor in the
20th century by
George McCready Price, a
Seventh-day Adventist and amateur geologist who wrote a book in
1923 to provide an explicitly
Christian fundamentalist perspective on geology.
[4][5] His work was adapted and updated by
Henry M. Morris and
John C. Whitcomb, Jr. in their book ''
The Genesis Flood'' in
1961. Morris and Whitcomb argued that the Earth was geologically recent, that the
Fall of Man had triggered the
second law of thermodynamics, and that the Great Flood had laid down most of the geological strata in the space of a single year.
[6] Given this history, they argued, "the last refuge of the case for evolution immediately vanishes away, and the record of the rocks becomes a tremendous witness . . . to the holiness and justice and power of the living God of Creation!"
[7]
This became the foundation of a new generation of Young Earth creationist thinkers, who organized themselves around Morris'
Institute for Creation Research. Subsequent research by the
Creation Research Society has observed and analyzed, and interpreted geological formations, within a flood geology framework, including the
La Brea Tar Pits,
[8] the Tavrick Formation (
Tauric Formation, Russian: "Tavricheskaya formatsiya") in the
Crimean Peninsula[9] and
Stone Mountain,
Georgia.
[10] In each case, the creationists claimed that the flood geology interpretation had superior explanatory power than the uniformitarian explanation. The Creation Research Society argues that "uniformitarianism is wishful thinking".
[11]
The impact on creationism and fundamentalist Christianity of these ideas is considerable. Morris' theories of flood geology are widely promoted throughout the
United States and overseas, with his books being translated into many other languages. Flood geology is still a major theme of modern creationism, though it is rejected by
earth scientists.
Theological basis
Flood geology starts from the viewpoint that the Biblical ''
Book of Genesis'' is an accurate and impartial description of actual historical events.
Young Earth creationists – a position held by the majority of proponents of flood geology – believe that God created the universe between 6000 and 10,000 years ago, in the space of six days.
Genesis states that God deliberately caused the flood, indicating that the cause of the flood was supernatural in origin. The account describes two events which resulted in the flood, the "fountains of the great deep were broken up" and the "windows of heaven were opened". It rained for 40 days then the Ark began to float. Rains continued for another 110 days which, along with the waters from the breaking up of the "fountains of the great deep", keep the land flooded. At that time, 150 days, the Ark came to rest on the mountains of Ararat (not necessarily Mount Ararat, but the mountains in that region). The waters then receded amidst a "great wind."
The idea that Genesis is literally accurate is not universally held within
Christianity, being associated principally with conservative evangelical and fundamentalist Protestant denominations in the United States. The
Church of England and the
Roman Catholic Church, for instance, both regard Genesis as being a non-literal description of the Earth's creation. Indeed, the literalness of Genesis had been rejected in Jewish thought as early as the
1st century by
Philo of Alexandria, and in Christian thought in the
3rd century by
Origen. Although Origen was followed by the
Alexandrian school and such
Church Fathers as
Augustine of Hippo, the
Antiochian school, which preferred a more literal interpretation of Scripture, was always numerically superior.
[12]
Opponents of flood geology within the church such as
Landon Gilkey argue that it and
creation science, as well as
philosophical naturalism err in reducing all truth to scientific truth. Gilkey’s key claim is that these endeavors confuse religion’s language of ultimate origins with scientific theories about proximate origins and as a result give the impression that independent domains of knowledge are competing exhaustive explanations of reality.
[13][14] Others regard flood geology as both unscientific and an impediment to
evangelism.
[15]
Creationist interpretations of evidence

A quartzite block in Cambrian sedimentary strata, identical to quartzite found in the Precambrian layer, which creationists believe came to rest there due to large-scale liquefaction.
Generally, the
geologic column and the
fossil record are used as major pieces of evidence in the modern scientific explanation of the development and
evolution of life on Earth as well as a means to establish the
age of the Earth. As such, a major task for many creationists is to reinterpret these pieces of scientific data in their general project of discrediting modern scientific explanations.
The tradional explanation is to deny the existence of the
Geologic Column. This is the approach taken by Morris and Whitcomb in their 1961 book, ''
The Genesis Flood'', and it is continued today by leading creationists such as Michael Oard and
John Woodmorappe.
[16]
Other creationists accept the existence of the
Geologic Column and seek to interpret it in terms of a sequence of events that might have occurred during the Flood. This is the approach taken by
Institute for Creation Research creationists such as Andrew Snelling, Steven A. Austin and
Kurt Wise, as well as Creation Ministries International.
[17][18]
Fossilization
Counter to the scientific understanding of fossilization, creationists claim that
fossils are evidence of the flood, where the remains of many of the Earth's lifeforms were quickly buried by sediments in the short period of the flood. In support of their argument, flood geology supporters point to the fact that fossilization can only take place when the matter is buried quickly so that the matter does not decompose.
Fossil dating by using
index fossils is rejected, because fossils are dated with reference to uniformitarian assumptions regarding the rate at which the sediments were laid down. They argue that there is no reason that these assumptions must be held, that the evidence could just as easily be interpreted as rapid sedimentation during a recent flood.
Fossil layering
The ordering of fossil layers is often used as evidence for the scientific explanation of geological features. Flood geology tries to explain that while
dinosaurs never share the same layers as
mammoths, this is not due to temporal separation of the organisms. Instead an unspecified and unmodeled "hydraulic sorting action" is claimed to be able to sort out fossils according to their shape, density, size, and the gases released from the body after death.
Flood geology supporters argue that the existence of large
oil deposits are the result of the flood's accumulation and subsequent subsurface compression of large amounts of dead plant matter. They argue that this explains how so much organic matter came to be buried and pooled beneath enormous amounts of sediment before the organic matter decomposed, and explains how the sediments came to quickly dry into sedimentary rock atop the fossil fuels.
Others have proposed that more "advanced" animals were better able to escape the rising flood waters, so that they were not overtaken until later. This idea is criticized by scientists as untenable since there are "advanced" and "simple" animals found throughout the entire fossil record.
Frozen mammoths
According to scientists, the giant
mammoths went extinct about 11,000 years ago, although remnant populations are believed to have persisted on an island off the coast of
Siberia based on fossil remains dated to about 2000 BC.
[19]
Some proponents of Flood Geology have claimed that this extinction is evidence of catastrophism because certain mammoths have been found with grass in their mouths. Proponents of the
vapor canopy flood model claim it can explain these mammoth remains. They argue mammoths were suddenly frozen solid when large quantities of water vapour in the atmosphere were deposited as ice at the poles.
Scientists do not view the few instances of grass in the mouths of frozen mammoth carcasses as sufficient evidence for a global catastrophe. Moreover, the extraordinary temperatures needed to quick-freeze a mammoth are way below any temperature ever measured on earth and the idea of a canopy itself is considered so extreme as to cause the surface of the Earth to have the conditions of a pressure boiler before the flood.
However, there are so many problems with this that even the Young Earth Creationist ministry
Answers in Genesis states that it is an argument that should not be used.
[20] Rather, they claim that mammoths and the surrounding circumstances are best explained by radical climate change in a supposed ice-age following the flood, although that answer is not to be found in Genesis. Other creationists counter that there is no evidence for an
Ice Age before 10,000 years ago. Scientists, however, recognises a large number of earlier Ice Ages, with the earliest so far identified occurring 2.3 billion years ago.
Liquefaction
Proponents of flood geology believe that
Liquefaction, a phenomenon commonly seen in
quicksand and
earthquakes, played a major role during the posited flood. Some have proposed that a global flood is the most reasonable explanation for the means by which sediment came to precipitate in such depth over so much of the Earth's surface. They further argue that the liquefaction predicted by the flood can explain phenomena such as transported blocks, sand plumes,
coal and
limestone deposits, and
aquifers.
They do not assert that ''all'' geological phenomena are a result of the flood. Flood geology supporters acknowledge many geological formations were formed by other processes. However, they believe that there are a large number of geological formations which can only be explained with reference to massive cataclysmic action involving enormous amounts of water and sediment which rapidly precipitated from solution, liquefied, and dried.
Radiometric dating
Much of flood geology is devoted to attacking the dating methods used in
anthropology,
geology, and
planetary science that give ages in conflict with young Earth theories. In particular, creationists dispute the reliability of
radiometric dating and
isochron analysis, both of which are central to geological theories of the age of the Earth. They usually dispute these methods based on uncertainties concerning initial concentrations of individually considered species and the associated measurement uncertainties caused by
diffusion of the parent and daughter isotopes. However, a full critique of the entire parameter-fitting analysis, which relies on dozens of radionuclei parent and daughter pairs, has not been done by creationists hoping to cast doubt on the technique.
Submarine canyon formation
Proponents of Flood Geology argue that such
submarine canyons were formed as the floodwaters receded from the continents. Such extensions are found in the
Congo,
Amazon,
Ganges, and
Hudson rivers, they are generally understood to be
geological formations which have developed when
sea levels were significantly lower than today.
Creationists argue that uniformitarian explanations are inferior to flood explanations, because the submarine canyons are extremely long, deep, and the sides are steep and often vertical, and thus do not show evidence of the erosion predicted by long periods of time, and being much more consistent with a shorter time frame. This claim is unsupported by the
planetary science description of
erosion processes which allow for a wide variety of formations to occur over the (relatively) long timeframes seen in scientific descriptions of such formations.
Proposed mechanisms of the flood
Creationists have been proposed a number of the mechanism to explain how a global flood might have occurred.
Hydroplates
Hydroplates, as proposed by mechanical engineer
Walt Brown, Director of the Center for Scientific Creation, are the concept that the Earth was originally created with a great deal of subterranean water, and that the flood was brought on when the crust of the Earth was cracked, allowing this water to escape violently to the surface, and broke the surface into "hydroplates" which rapidly divided during and after the flood.
[21]
Runaway subduction
"Runaway
subduction" or
Catastrophic plate tectonics, was proposed by geophysicist
John Baumgardner, and supported by the
Institute for Creation Research and
Answers in Genesis. This holds that rapid plunge of the original continental plates into the
mantle could have heated silicates to a temperature at which
tectonic motion would have happened extremely quickly. Proponents point to subducted slabs in the mantle which are still relatively cool, which they regard as evidence that they have not been there for millions of years of temperature equilibration.
[22]
Vapor canopy
A
vapor canopy was proposed by Henry Morris in his book ''The Genesis Flood'' in the 1960s. It holds that a canopy of water vapor existed over the atmosphere prior to the flood, and that the floodwaters were brought on when this vapor canopy collapsed. This model has been rejected by many creationists.
[23]
Scientific analysis of flood geology
Modern geology, and its sub-disciplines of
earth science,
geochemistry,
geophysics,
glaciology,
paleoclimatology,
paleontology and other scientific disciplines utilize the
scientific method to analyze the geology of the earth. The key tenants of flood geology are refuted by scientific analysis and do not have any standing in the scientific community. Modern
geology relies on a number of established principles, one of the most important of which is Charles Lyell's principle of
uniformitarianism. In relation to geological forces it states that the shaping of the Earth has occurred by means of mostly slow-acting forces that can be seen in operation today. By applying this principle, geologists have determined that the Earth is approximately
4.5 billion years old. They study the
lithosphere of the Earth to gain information on the history of the planet. Geologists divide
Earth's history into
eons,
eras,
periods,
epochs, and
faunal stages characterized by well-defined breaks in the
fossil record (see
Geologic time scale).
[24][25] In general, there is a lack of any evidence for any of the above effects proposed by flood geologists and their claims of fossil layering are not taken seriously by scientists.
[26]
Physics
Many scientific objections have been raised concerning the physical mechanics of flood geology. In particular, the amount of water required to cover the Earth's entire surface is enormous enough that no observed mechanism can plausibly explain where it came from or where it went. The mechanisms proposed by creationists to account for the
fossil record,
lithospheric layering, and
tectonic formations are also all firmly rejected by the scientific community.
If the flood were a global flood, a source of water would need to be found which could provide such a deluge. Flood geology supporters have proposed several sources at different times: (1) a
vapor canopy in the upper atmosphere; (2) a comet strike; (3) the Earth's crust was much flatter, requiring less water in order to cover the face of the planet; and (4), subterranean water sources.
However, geological science indicates that none of these theories are viable.
The proposed
vapor canopy suggested a layer of water vapor in the upper atmosphere which, triggered by a meteoroid, caused a giant rain shower and so contributed to the flood. However, such a volume of water held suspended in the atmosphere would give rise to an atmospheric pressure in the order of nine atmospheres. The atmospheric temperature would also have to be extremely high to prevent the saturated atmosphere from condensing. The vapor canopy model has lost favour and is no longer accepted by most creationist scientists.
A canopy holding a column of more than 15 m of liquid water or its equivalent in vapor or ice would increase the atmospheric pressure to levels that would destroy life. In addition, the the concentration of oxygen and nitrogen would become toxic. In addition, if the water from this column were to fall, enough to from a 15 m layer of water upon the earth, the heat of condensation would raise the atmospheric temperature by over 780 degrees C, which of course would cause more water to evaporate, and a permanent greenhouse effect would ensue. The planet
Venus is an example of that effect.
[27]
Flood geology should not be confused with episodic
catastrophism as observed by geologists and earth scientists at many locations throughout the Earth's ~4.55 billion year natural history. Such confusion surrounded the observations of the geologist
J. Harlen Bretz who discovered the
Missoula Floods in the
Pacific Northwest of the United States.
[28][29][30] His observations and theories were rejected out of hand for many years by geologists and scientists on the basis that catastrophism was not science, but rather religion. Today, it is recognized by geologists that while periodic catastrophes may occur, there are
uniformitarian principles at work in geologic history as well.
Creationists continue to search for evidence in the natural world that they consider to be consistent with the above description, such as evidence of rapid formation. For example, there have been claims of raindrop marks and water ripples at layer boundaries, sometimes associated with the claimed fossilized footprints of men and dinosaurs walking together. Most of this evidence has been debunked by scientists
[31] and some have been shown to be fakes.
[32] Creationists highlight unexplained phenomena in order to point out what they see as inconsistencies in the scientific view (see
God of the gaps), and they often profess a general incredulity about geological mechanisms of
mineral,
rock, and
fossil formation.
Archeology
Archaeology proves to be a potent source of evidence. Flood geology claims that the current sedimentary layers were produced by liquefaction, and that objects caught in the flood (including living creatures) were sorted by mass and location at the time when the flood engulfed them. However, archaeologists state that if this sorting actually took place, heavy, dense objects (such as human artifacts) would be expected to sink to the bottom. In actuality, man-made artifacts are very close to the top of the sedimentary layers.
Furthermore, archaeologists claim that a number of ancient cultures (such as those of
Australia, Egypt and Mesopotamia), are older than the alleged date of the Flood, and that the flood would have destroyed much of the evidence of these civilisations and deeply buried the rest. Creationists don't dispute the latter point - they reject the dates of those civilisations. Archaeologists claim that these methods of dating have been verified time and time again (see
carbon dating). They also point out that carbon dating methods are entirely independent of the detailed records kept by those civilizations. See
Mesopotamia and
History of Egypt.
Believers in Flood Geology also point out that
flood stories can be found in many cultures, places and religions, not just in the Bible; this, they suggest, is evidence of an actual event in the historic past because local floods would not explain the similarities in the flood stories.
[33] Anthropologists generally reject this view and highlight the fact that much of the human population lives near water sources such as rivers and coasts, where unusually severe floods can be expected to occur occasionally and will be recorded in tribal mythology.
[34] Geologists
William Ryan and
Walter Pitman have suggested that a massive local flood in the
Black Sea area, or possibly even the huge rise in sea levels at the end of the last
Ice Age, may be responsible for the preponderance of the flood myths in the Near East and across the world.
[35]
Geology

The
Rocky Mountains; geologists do not believe the Rockies share erosion traits consistent with a great flood - erosion would be expected equal to the Appalachian Mountains, below

The
Appalachian Mountains show an immense level of erosion. Geologists assert that if a flood had occurred, similar erosion should be found in the Rocky Mountains, above.
Geologists claim that the flood, had it occurred, should also have produced large-scale effects spread throughout the entire world. Erosion should be evenly distributed, yet the levels of erosion in, for example, the Appalachians and the Rocky Mountains differ significantly.
However, different regions of the Flood need not have the same erosional intensities, because that depends on depth and gradient as well as rock hardness. In addition, proponents of Flood Geology believe
submarine canyons were formed as the floodwaters receded from the continents. These canyons are actually due to persistent water flow which creates over a period of thousands if not millions of years structural breaks in the
continental shelf. These fractures are even modeled in geological simulations which show the processes occurring as described by scientists.
Radiometric dating analysis indicates that the Earth is at least 4.5 billion years old. Young Earth creationists reject these ages on the grounds of what they regard as being tenuous and untestable assumptions in the methodology. Apparently inconsistent radiometric dates are often quoted to cast doubt on the utility and accuracy of the method. Scientists who get involved in this
debate point out that dating methods only rely on the assumptions that the
physical laws governing
radioactive decay have not been violated since the sample was formed (harking back to Lyell's doctrine of
uniformitarianism). They also point out that the "problems" that creationists publicly mentioned can be shown to either not be problems at all, are issues with known contamination, or simply the result of incorrectly evaluating legitimate data.
Paleontology
If fossilization took place extremely quickly during the Flood, then — paleontologists assert — fossilized remains should be far more numerous and widespread than is actually seen.
Furthermore, if creatures were differentiated by body size and density, then massive dinosaurs such as ''
Diplodocus'' and ''
Brachiosaurus'' should be found near the top sediments, rather than in sediments containing all the other Jurassic dinosaurs.
Additionally, paleontologists note that if all the fossilized animals were killed in the flood, and the flood is responsible for fossilization, then the average density of vertebrates was an abnormally high number, close to 2100 creatures per acre, judging from
fossil sites found worldwide.
[36]
Philosophical objections
The scientific community contends that Flood Geology, in contrast to conventional geology, is not able to plausibly explain the available observations. However, even if both hypotheses did an equally good job, many scientists would nevertheless reject Flood Geology on philosophical grounds, specifically
Occam's Razor. Occam's razor is the principle of rejecting any unnecessary assumptions from scientific theories: "It is vain to do with more what can be done with less." Applied to geology, if one explanation requires only natural processes and the other requires a God in addition, then the explanation that only requires natural processes is to be preferred. See
here for a more thorough discussion.
Furthermore, Flood Geology supporters are accused of not approaching the subject with the objective, open mind which is the scientific ideal. Their purpose is to find evidence for a particular explanation, rather than to find the explanation that best fits the evidence. The
history of geology supports this view by the recounting that geologists had looked at the evidence for a worldwide flood in the century before Darwin and found it lacking, dismissing it in favor of uniformitarian models.
Notes and references
1. The Cambridge History of Science: Volume 4, Eighteenth-Century Science, , R, Porter, Cambridge University Press, ,
2. Creational Theology and the History of Physical Science: The Creationist Tradition from Basil to Bohr, , CB, Kaiser, Brill Academic Publishers, ,
3. Geology and Mineralogy Considered With Reference to Natural Theology (History of Paleontology), , W, Buckland, Ayer Company Publishing, ,
4. Evolutionary Geology & the New Catastrophism, Price, GM, , , Sourcebook Project, ,
5. The Creationists: From Scientific Creationism to Intelligent Design, Expanded Edition, Numbers, Ronald L., , , Harvard University Press, ,
6. This is the same model that Buckland had rejected 130 years earlier.
7. The Genesis Flood: The Biblical Record and Its Scientific Implications, Whitcomb, JC, , , P&R Publishing, ,
8. La Brea Tar Pits: Evidence of a Catastrophic Flood, , W, Weston, Creation Research Society Quarterly Journal,
9. Flood Geology of the Crimean Peninsula Part I: Tavrick Formation, , AV, Lalomov, Creation Research Society Quarterly Journal,
10. Stone Mountain Georgia: A Creation Geologist's Perspective, , CR, Froede, Creation Research Society Quarterly Journal,
11. Surface and Subsurface Errors in Anti-Creationist Geology, , JK, Reed, Creation Research Society Quarterly Journal,
12. The History of Genesis and the Creation Stories Linder, Doug
13. Blue Twilight: Nature, Creationism, and American Religion, , L, Gilkey, Augsburg Fortress Publishers, ,
14. When the Great Abyss Opened: Classic and Contemporary Readings of Noah's Flood, , JD, Pleins, Oxford University Press, ,
15. Themes in Religion and American Culture, , P, Goff, University of North Carolina Press, ,
16. The Geologic Column: Does it Exist?, , J, Woodmorappe, Creation Ex Nihilo Technical Journal,
17. CATASTROPHIC PLATE TECTONICS: A GLOBAL FLOOD MODEL OF EARTH HISTORY - Institute for Creation Research
18. The pre-Flood/Flood boundary at the base of the earth's transition zone
19. Radiocarbon Dating Evidence for Mammoths on Wrangel Island, Arctic Ocean, until 2000 BC, , SL, Vartanyan, Radiocarbon,
20. Arguments we think creationists should NOT use
21. In the Beginning: Compelling Evidence for Creation and the Flood, Brown, W, , , Center for Scientific Creation, ,
22.
23. What arguments are doubtful, hence, inadvisable to use? Canopy theory
24. Essentials of Geology, Lutgens, FK, Tarbuck, EJ, Tasa, D, , , Prentice Hall, ,
25. Earth Science, Tarbuck, EJ & Lutgens, FK, , , Pearson Prentice Hall, ,
26. Problems with a Global Flood
27. The Vapor Canopy Theory-Is it in trouble? Krug, W
28. The Channeled Scabland of the Columbia Plateau, Bretz, JH, , , Journal of Geology,
29. The Spokane flood beyond the Channeled Scablands, Bretz, JH, , , Journal of Geology,
30. Vadose and phreatic features of limestone caverns, Bretz, JH, , , Journal of Geology,
31. Scientific Creationism and Error, , Robert, Shadewald, Creation/Evolution,
32. The "Burdick Print"
33. Flood Legends from Around the World
34. On the convergence of myth and reality: examples from the Pacific Islands, , Patrick D, Nunn, The Geography Journal, 2001
35. Balard and the Black Sea: the search for Noah's flood
36. Schadewald, R. (1982) Six 'Flood' arguments Creationists can't answer. ''Creation/Evolution'' '9', 12-17.
Further reading
★
In the Beginning: Compelling Evidence for Creation and the Flood, Brown, W, , , Center for Scientific Creation, ,
★ Dubrovo, N. A. et al., “Upper Quaternary Deposits and Paleogeography of the Region Inhabited by the Young Kirgilyakh Mammoth,” ''International Geology Review'', Vol. 24, No. 6, June 1982, p. 630.
★ Hapgood, Charles H. ''The Path of the Pole'' (Philadelphia: Chilton Book Company, 1970), p. 267.
★ Howorth, Henry H. ''The Mammoth and the Flood'' (London: Samson Low, Marston, Searle, and Rivington, 1887), pp. 2–4, 74–75.
★ M. Huc, ''Recollections of a Journey through Tartary, Thibet [Tibet], and China, During the Years 1844, 1845, and 1846''. Vol. 2 (New York: D. Appleton & Company, 1852), pp. 130–131.
★ H. Neuville, “On the Extinction of the Mammoth,” Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institution, 1919.
★
The Creationists: The Evolution of Scientific Creationism, Numbers, RL, , , University of California Press, ,
★ E. W. Pfizenmayer, ''Siberian Man and Mammoth'', translated from
German by Muriel D. Simpson (London: Black & Son Limited, 1939).
★ Ukraintseva, Valentina V. ''Vegetation Cover and Environment of the “Mammoth Epoch” in Siberia'' (Hot Springs, South Dakota: The Mammoth Site of Hot Springs, 1993), pp. 12–13.
See also
★
Baraminology
★
Creation biology
★
Creation science
★
Frank Lewis Marsh
★
Pre-Adamite
★
Pseudoscience
★
Polystrate fossil
External links
Flood geology sites
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Clues to Noah's Flood Found on Ocean Floor
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Noah's Flood - What does the Evidence Say?
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Unveiling the Mechanism Behind the Genesis Flood
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Startling Evidence That Noah's Flood Really Happened
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Answers in Genesis' Geology Questions and Answers Page
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Tas Walker's Biblical Geology
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Christian Geology
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Global Flood Geology from "Creation Science Prophecy"
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Hydroplate Theory
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Biblical Evidence for the Universality of the Genesis Flood - Richard M. Davidson - John Nevin Andrews Professor of Old Testament Interpretation - Old Testament Department - Andrews University, Berrien Springs, Michigan
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Revolution against Evolution geology page
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Recolonisation Theory
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Shock Dynamics geology theory - Evidence of a catastrophic meteorite impact causing continental drift in 26 hours instead of 200 million years
Sites critical of Flood Geology
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Answers In Creation and
Age of the Earth. Old earth creationist websites explaining the problems of young earth flood geology.
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talk.origins Flood Geology archive
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Fossils, Flood Geology and Creation Science
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Creationist "Flood Geology" Versus Common Sense
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Problems with a Global Flood
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Mount St. Helens: Explosive Evidence for Catastrophe
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History of the Collapse of "Flood Geology" and a Young Earth, adapted from the book ''The Biblical Flood'' by Davis A. Young, ISBN 0-8028-0719-4
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Why a Global Flood is impossible
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A Series of Articles written by a former YEC attacking Flood Geology
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A Collection of Essays Criticizing Creation Science, including Flood Geology
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Critique of a YEC article defending Flood Geology
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Problems with Flood Geology