Some responses:
Galatian – We have no idea of the numbers in the early populations, therefore there is no need to try to ‘imagine’ anything in terms of foliage, animals eating it, etc. In addition, I am aware – as I am sure you also are – that in our attempt to identify fossils, we may well be identifying juveniles and adults as different species, or even males and females as different species. So I’m not too prone to the idea of trying to guess for you how many of what could have lived when in whatever kind of conditions.
Secondly, you mentioned necessary minimums for populations for survival as a population (or species). We all tend to think in terms of ‘now’, with the genetic restrictions and problems that need to be dealt with today. We need to remember that when God created the various kinds, there were no mutations hindering any of the original populations, and therefore there would not have been a necessary minimum for some time. We also need to remember there was no predation, at least among land animals and birds, before the Deluge.
Regarding the size you claim for the average dinosaur, do you have a reference for that, please? Everything I have read up until now, from both sides of the fence mentions a much smaller average size than you seem to indicate. Thank you. I would also ask you where you reference your comment “there were entire herds of really big ones.”
About trilobites – aside from your word play on the issue, trilobites are the index fossil for the Cambrian strata. Thus, when a trilobite fossil is found, the presumption is that the strata being seen is Cambrian. And yes, there is a degree of circularity there.
Lastly, the violent storms which would have occurred during the catastrophes which spanned from the Deluge to Peleg and beyond would have been more than enough to inundate previously marshy areas with many feet of wind-blown sand. The fact is that we DO see river-beds and such under the sands in the northern African desert right now. And we do have evidence of sudden catastrophes which do not go along with the slow and gradual accumulation of changes for given areas.
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Johnv – you were given an answer regarding human fossils not being with the dinosaur fossils in the other thread. When you say it was not ‘thoroughly explained,’ I’m sorry. Please keep in mind that we do not have many fossils of large mammals or other large animals of any kind! So, with the few that we have, we do not see nearly everything we would like to see, including more evidence of the ecosystems in which the various populations lived. Most of what we see in museums and such are artists’ imaginations. However, there is the fact that the large dinosaurs, if they were cold-blooded, would have HAD to live in very warm areas and, given their size, would very likely have been swamp and water grazers, as this is where many plants can grow the fastest and also where that large a body mass can get extra support from the water. We do find this proximity to water regarding the Behemoth in Job, which is interesting.
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Peter101 – The biblical kinds are the original populations of created animals and plants. One way of trying to identify kinds today is via hybridization. Since zebras and horses can mate and have viable offspring, then yes, they are part of one kind. Nor do you have to take my word for anything. I would not expect that at all. So I suggest you ask anyone you like who deals with reptiles about the amount of external heat required for a cold-blooded animal of any given size. My information came from Dr. Elaine Kennedy, expert on dinosaurs, at Geoscience Research Institute (
http://www.grisda.org/about.htm )during a lunch Barry and I had with her and some others about two years ago. She has done quite a bit of field work herself, and was quite interested in some of Barry’s work, as she felt it might offer the environment she was sure these early large dinosaurs would have needed.
Regarding Gentry’s work, your criticisms aside, he was considered the world’s leading authority on radiohalos before it was discovered he was a creationist! That discovery, of course, invalidated all his brain cells and his work….
As far as Andrew Snelling is concerned, he is a personal friend and one of the people I hold in very high regard, both as a Christian and as a geologist. I know him, I know his work, and I know his attitude regarding his work. He is competent, professional, cautious, and humble. So the fact that you do not find him ‘credible’ only tells me you are ignorant of both the man and his work.
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UTEOTW – I remember reviewing a paper on the animals and the tar pits a few years ago, and there is some pretty good evidence that the tar pits were not ‘stumbled into’ by various animals. The remains are fragmented and mixed. “This chaotic intermingling of damaged and broken fossils seemed to suggest that some monstrous catastrophe had overtaken these creatures of the remote past.” Pit 16, when excavated, yielded a rich supply of animal remains, including dire wolves, saber-tooth cats, coyotes, camels, bison, horses, and even the bulky mastodon. However, this pit was only four feet wide! The animals remains at the bottom dated at about 38,000 years old. Those closer to the top dated at 13,500 years old. That’s about 25,000 years that the tar pit did not solidify, or crust over to the extent that animals would be able to walk over it safely? Hard to imagine….
It is also interesting to note that there are no soft body parts of the animals in the pits. The actual evidence at La Brea and other tar pits is more in line with a sudden catastrophe than slow entrapment over many years.
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John6:63 – The early church, Josephus, the Apostles and the Lord Himself all referenced the Greek Alexandrian Septuagint. Here you will find that the age of the earth today would be closer to 8000 than 6000 years old . Just a point of relative trivia for you.