Bless the LORD, O my soul. O LORD my God, thou art very great; thou art clothed with honour and majesty. Who coverest thyself with light as with a garment: who stretchest out the heavens like a curtain: Who layeth the beams of his chambers in the waters: who maketh the clouds his chariot: who walketh upon the wings of the wind: Who maketh his angels spirits; his ministers a flaming fire: Who laid the foundations of the earth, that it should not be removed for ever.
( Psalms 104:1-5 )
Taking Bible verses out of context and making doctrines is dangerous, but what if we keep the context and find that they are consistent with our paradigm, the broad narrative of scripture and empirical observations?
Scientific blindness is never so apparent as when dealing with remnants of Noah’s flood. This articles shows how the words flood, wet, catastrophe, intense, dry and drought are unavoidable.
Out in Utah’s eastern desert, nestled among the purple- and red-banded hills of the Morrison Formation, there rests one of the richest dinosaur bonebeds ever found. It’s also the most mysterious. Since the site’s initial discovery over a century ago, the jumbled remains of over 46 Allosaurus – as well as the comparatively rare bones of other Jurassic dinosaurs – have been pulled from this one spot, and there’s every indication that there is more to be found than has yet been uncovered. But what brought all these dinosaurs here, and why do predators dominate this spot when almost every other bonebed of its kind has the expected array of abundant herbivores and rare carnivores?
There are almost as many takes on what created the bonebed at Cleveland-Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry as scientists who have studied it. The initial, and most obvious, idea was that this was a predator trap like the La Brea asphalt seeps. Some poor herbivore got stuck in mud, died, and its rotten stink drew scores of Allosaurus here, which became trapped in turn. But there’s no tar or other trapping mechanism to do the dirty work. This led to other suggestions – that the dinosaurs were killed by drought, that the site was a poison spring, that the dinosaurs died elsewhere and their carcasses were washed to the spot – but there was always some point that didn’t make sense or remained contentions. Where some experts saw a dry environment, others saw one that was frequently wet. Where some saw evidence of one catastrophic event, others saw multiple depositions that happened over time.
That’s what led geoscientists Joe Peterson, John Warnock, Steven Clawson, and their colleagues to move literal tons of rock and excavate Cleveland-Lloyd anew. Not for new bones, but for the geological clues that might let the researchers more accurately envision what happened there in the days of the Late Jurassic. What they’ve found doesn’t conclusively solve the Mesozoic murder mystery, but it refines the setting where the inscrutable events took place.
Peterson and coauthors looked at the fossil assemblage from two angles – a geological technique called x-ray florescence to determine the geochemistry of the Cleveland-Lloyd rocks and a detailed analysis of bone fragments found within the quarry. Together, these two lines of evidence help outline what must have been an incredibly smelly Jurassic scene.
While it’s certainly dramatic to think of hundreds of dinosaurs accumulating in one spot all at once, the findings of Peterson and his colleagues suggest that Cleveland-Lloyd didn’t form in a single event. This spot in the Utah desert was once an ephemeral pond that came and went as the Jurassic seasons shifted from wet to dry. And during the wet times, local flooding transported dinosaur bodies and bones to this particular spot where they settled.
How the CLDQ bonebed was formed, starting with carcasses being washed in, bones being exposed, bones being weathered and broken into fragments, and the addition of more carcasses in the next flood stage. Credit: Peterson et al 2017
The bone fragments help tell the story. The patterns of abrasion and other details suggest that the fragments came from bones already within the pond deposit, getting jostled and reworked with the swings between the seasons. Likewise, the geochemical results supported that this was a wet spot for at least some times of the year. In fact, the analysis showed that the Cleveland-Lloyd sediments had unusually elevated levels of heavy metals compared to other bonebeds of similar age. This doesn’t mean that Cleveland-Lloyd was a poison spring – as has also been suggested to explain the carnage – but that the geochemical profile is instead a sign of rotting carcasses sitting in a standing body of water, turning the pond into an undrinkable, mineral-rich soup. And this could explain why fossils of fish, turtles, and crocodiles are rare in the quarry, as well as why bite marks and signs of scavenging are so rare. When full, this was a rank spot with foul water that was best avoided.
What the new study does is look at the environment of Cleveland-Lloyd over the span of Jurassic seasons. It sets new parameters for thinking about, and questioning, what happened there over 145 million years ago. The site was an ephemeral pond, and it didn’t come together all at once. That may sound simple, but it sets a new baseline for interpreting how such an unusual site came to be.
Plenty of questions remain. If the dinosaurs were washed in, then what killed them in the first place? And does this deposit represent especially harsh times – like intense, recurring droughts – or does it encapsulate the normal comings and goings of dinosaurs during the Late Jurassic? On top of that, we still don’t know why Allosaurus is overrepresented at this site compared to almost every other Morrison Formation bonebed of its kind.
Perhaps something unusual was happening in the vicinity that caused Allosaurus to congregate. Then again, the “different lizard” was by far the most common carnivore of the Late Jurassic west – if you find a theropod in the Morrison, nine times out of ten it’s going to be Allosaurus – and so exhuming an abundance of Allosaurus in a deposit that formed over years and years might not actually require a special explanation other than the predators were abundant at that time. In fact, a few hours away from Cleveland-Lloyd just over the Colorado border, there is another, smaller bonebed where Allosaurus dominates. Perhaps Cleveland-Lloyd represents just another slice of regular Jurassic life rather than something unusual that requires special explanation. Then again, as Peterson and colleagues write, it’s possible that the surfeit of Allosaurus at Cleveland-Lloyd is pointing towards previously-unknown aspects of their behavior – perhaps there was a breeding or nesting site nearby, or maybe these dinosaurs were brought into closer numbers in times of drought and then die as is seen with modern animals in sharply seasonal habitats.
The story of Cleveland-Lloyd is far from told. The conditions that created the bonebed, and what led to Allosaurus
being buried in unprecedented numbers, are still unknown, not to
mention all the other paleobiological and ecological details still
embedded in bone and rock. But the new study is a significant step in
reconstructing what happened during the days when dinosaurs ruled the
Earth. And by starting with how they died, maybe we can learn something
new about how these amazing animals lived.
I knew a man in Christ above
fourteen years ago, (whether in the body, I cannot tell; or whether out
of the body, I cannot tell: God knoweth;) such an one caught up to the
third heaven. And I knew such a man, (whether in the body, or out of the
body, I cannot tell: God knoweth;) How that he was caught up into
paradise, and heard unspeakable words, which it is not lawful for a man
to utter.
( 2 Corinthians 12:2-4 )
For the Christians out there who have capitulated with science and believe that the earth is adrift in an infinite universe, there is no third heaven, so what is Paul referring to?
Evidence of the rapid formation of tectonic plates during the breakup of Pangaea is described in garbled science lingo and woven into the prevailing narrative of asteroid induced mass extinction.
Scientists say they can now describe in detail how the asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs produced its huge crater.
The
reconstruction of the event 66 million years ago was made possible by
drilling into the remnant bowl and analysing its rocks.
These show how the space impactor made the hard surface of the planet slosh back and forth like a fluid.
At one stage, a mountain higher than Everest was thrown up before collapsing back into a smaller range of peaks.
“And this all happens on the scale of minutes, which is quite amazing,” Prof Joanna Morgan from Imperial College London, UK, told BBC News.
Their
study confirms a very dynamic, very energetic model for crater
formation, and will go a long way to explaining the resulting
cataclysmic environmental changes.
The debris thrown into the
atmosphere likely saw the skies darken and the global climate cool for
months, perhaps even years, driving many creatures into extinction, not
just the dinosaurs.
The outer rim (white arc) of the crater lies under the Yucatan Peninsula itself, but the inner peak ring is best accessed offshore
A 15km-wide object dug a hole in Earth’s crust 100km across and 30km deep
This bowl then collapsed, leaving a crater 200km across and a few km deep
The crater’s centre rebounded and collapsed again, producing an inner ring
Today, much of the crater is buried offshore, under 600m of sediments
On land, it is covered by limestone, but its rim is traced by an arc of sinkholes
Mexico’s famous sinkholes (cenotes) have formed in weakened limestone overlying the crater
The researchers targeted a particular zone in the 200km-wide bowl
known as the “peak ring”, which – if earlier ideas were correct – should
have contained the rocks that moved the greatest distance in the
impact. These would have been dense granites lifted from almost 10km
down.
And that is precisely what the team found.
“Once we
got through the impact melt on top, we recovered pink granite. It was so
obvious to the eye – like what you would expect to see in a kitchen
countertop,” recalled Prof Sean Gulick from the University of Texas at Austin, US.
But these were not normal granites, of course. They were deformed and fractured at every scale – visibly in the hand and even down at the level of the rock’s individual mineral crystals. Evidence of enormous stress, of having experienced colossal pressures.
The team retrieved many hundreds of metres of rock from the crater
The analysis of the core materials now fits an astonishing narrative.
This
describes the roughly 15km-wide stony asteroid instantly punching a
cavity in the Earth’s surface some 30km deep and 80-100km across.
Unstable, and under the pull of gravity, the sides of this depression promptly started to collapse inwards.
At
the same time, the centre of the bowl rebounded, briefly lifting rock
higher than the Himalayas, before also falling down to cover the
inward-rushing sides of the initial hole.
“If this deep-rebound
model is correct (it’s called the dynamic collapse model), then our peak
ring rocks should be the rocks that have travelled farthest in the
impact – first, outwards by kilometres, then up in the air by over 10km,
and back down and outwards by another, say, 10km. So their total travel
path is something like 30km, and they do that in under 10 minutes,”
Prof Gulick told the BBC’s Science in Action programme.
Imagine
a sugar cube dropped into a cup of tea. The drink’s liquid first gets
out of the way of the cube, moves back in and up, before finally
slopping down.
When the asteroid struck the Earth, the rocks it hit also behaved like a fluid.
“These rocks must have lost their strength and cohesion, and very dramatically had their friction reduced,” said Prof Morgan. “So, yes, temporarily, they behave like a fluid. It’s the only way you can make a crater like this.”
One of the important outcomes of the research is that it provides a
useful template also to understand the surfaces of other planets.
All the terrestrial worlds and even Earth’s Moon are scarred with craters just like Chicxulub.
And
knowing how rocks can move vertically and horizontally in an impact
will assist scientists as they attempt to interpret similar crustal
features seen elsewhere in the Solar System.
The project to drill into Chicxulub Crater was conducted by the European Consortium for Ocean Research Drilling (ECORD) as part of the International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP). The expedition was also supported by the International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP).
Schrodinger Crater on the Moon looks exactly the same as Chicxulub and would have been made – according to this analysis – in a very similar way Artwork: The asteroid that made the crater was probably moving at about 20km/s when it hit the Earth
For thou, O God, hast proved us: thou hast tried us, as silver is tried.
( Psalm 66:10 )
The purpose of creation is to provide God with immortal companions who have chosen to fellowship with him for eternity. Eternity is for the pure. Jesus Christ is the means by which we are purified.
Another parable put he forth unto
them, saying, The kingdom of heaven is likened unto a man which sowed
good seed in his field: But while men slept, his enemy came and sowed
tares among the wheat, and went his way.
( Matthew 13:24-25 )
The purpose of creation is to give life with free will to all souls. God created companions to fellowship with, but he is not going to force anyone to spend eternity with him. You have the free will to choose.
Another parable put he forth unto them, saying, The kingdom of heaven is likened unto a man which sowed good seed in his field: But while men slept, his enemy came and sowed tares among the wheat, and went his way.
(Matthew 13:24-25) KJV
A lot of things about God start to make sense when you know the purpose of creation. In particular the uneasy feeling you may get with the idea of a kind and loving God casting sinners into hell.
Wherefore laying aside all malice,
and all guile, and hypocrisies, and envies, and all evil speakings, As
newborn babes, desire the sincere milk of the word, that ye may grow
thereby: If so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious.
( 1 Peter 2:2 )
If the deep was a formless mass in zero-G, and the entire mass burst into light during nucleosynthesis, then the Matty’s Paradigm scientific theory of creation has a reason why the CMBR has uniform distribution.
Wherefore laying aside all malice, and all guile, and hypocrisies, and envies, and all evil speakings, As newborn babes, desire the sincere milk of the word, that ye may grow thereby: If so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious.
(1 Peter 2:1-3) KJV
If a baby needs milk to survive before it can tolerate solid food, has this been patterned after the processes which took place on the first and second days of the creation of the universe?
Be not thou therefore ashamed of
the testimony of our Lord, nor of me his prisoner: but be thou partaker
of the afflictions of the gospel according to the power of God; Who hath
saved us, and called us with an holy calling, not according to
our works, but according to his own purpose and grace, which was given
us in Christ Jesus before the world began.
( 2 Timothy 1:8-9 )
True science uses empirical observations & physical evidence to show that the Bible is an accurate account of the creation, history, & future of earth. It gives us an answer to the question.