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Keyword: godgravesglyphs

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  • Building Planets: Can’t Make Them, But Hurry (more sophisticated storytelling passed-off as science)

    05/23/2009 9:41:56 AM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 29 replies · 894+ views
    CEH ^ | May 21, 2009
    Building Planets: Can’t Make Them, But HurryMay 21, 2009 — Constructing planets is a delicate business.  Trying to get tiny bits of dust to join up into balls has never been found to work.  It has to work fast, though, because unless the whole planet clears its dust lane, it will be dragged into the star in short order.  It seems you can’t get there from the bottom up, and even if you could, you’d be in trouble.  These and other problems with planet-building were discussed this month in two papers in the Annual Review of Earth and Planetary...
  • Wild, wild floods! (does growing evidence of massive regional floods point to single global flood?)

    05/17/2009 6:24:41 PM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 99 replies · 2,318+ views
    Journal of Creation ^ | Emil Silvestru
    Recently the Brits have found out what really separated them from mainland Europe: catastrophic flooding!...
  • Strata Data Axes Asteroid Dinosaur Demise

    05/14/2009 9:26:17 AM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 22 replies · 802+ views
    ICR ^ | May 14, 2009 | Brian Thomas, M.S.
    Strata Data Axes Asteroid Dinosaur Demise by Brian Thomas, M.S.* In 1980, a theory was proposed that an asteroid or comet impact was primarily responsible for the mass dinosaur extinctions that were observed in the fossil record. But while the impact tale has become widely accepted in popular culture, critical questions remain unanswered. Further scientific investigations have revealed geological and fossil evidence that is inconsistent with a single-impact extermination.[1,2] And recently, geologists catalogued even more data that is incompatible with the asteroid story...
  • A Mammoth Discovery (evidence of the flood?)

    05/05/2009 9:18:40 AM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 24 replies · 1,481+ views
    AiG ^ | May 4, 2009 | A.P. Galling
    A Mammoth Discovery by A.P. Galling, AiG–U.S. May 4, 2009 The frozen remains of a baby mammoth discovered in 2007 are stirring up talk—especially because the mammoth is “remarkably preserved,” National Geographic News reports. Found in the icy north of Siberia, the mammoth—named Lyuba—looks nearly lifelike. The photograph best shows how amazingly intact Lyuba is, with even eyelashes and clumps of brown wool remaining. Hers is the most complete woolly mammoth body to have ever been found. --snip-- According to the model of a post-Flood Ice Age (which Oard explains), the frozen mammoths we find today would have been preserved...
  • Worldwide FLOOD Worldwide EVIDENCE

    05/04/2009 7:42:04 PM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 101 replies · 2,675+ views
    AiG ^ | May 4, 2009
    Worldwide FLOOD Worldwide EVIDENCE When the Bible refers to a worldwide Flood in Genesis 7–8, that’s exactly what it means. Not local, not metaphorical, not some crazy dream—the waters covered the whole earth. Don’t just take our word for it, though. Take a look at the evidence right beneath your feet...
  • First dino 'blood' extracted from ancient bone (more evidence for young earth creation!)

    05/01/2009 8:25:18 AM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 169 replies · 3,873+ views
    New Scientist ^ | April 30, 2009 | Jeff Hecht
    A dinosaur bone buried for 80 million years has yielded a mix of proteins and microstructures resembling cells. The finding is important because it should resolve doubts about a previous report that also claimed to have extracted dino tissue from fossils...
  • Are Secular Geologists Ready to Consider a Global Flood?

    04/30/2009 12:41:59 PM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 43 replies · 1,272+ views
    CEH ^ | April 30, 2009
    Are Secular Geologists Ready to Consider a Global Flood? April 30, 2009 — Everyone knows the Bible tells the story of a global flood in Noah’s day. Creation scientists argue that its effects would have left visible evidence today – including most of the sedimentary layers and most of the fossil record. Secular geologists have laughed off this story since the 18th century as nothing but myth, of course, but a paper in the Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences suggests that some of them are re-evaluating the role of “megafloods” in earth history. Some megafloods might be considered...
  • ‘Plants rights’? The latest evolutionary absurdity (G.K. Chesterton prediction coming true?)

    04/30/2009 8:33:46 AM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 36 replies · 1,342+ views
    CMI ^ | April 30, 2009 | Lita Cosner
    Have you mowed your lawn lately? If so, you may have committed a grave ‘plants rights’ crime, according to the Swiss Federal Ethics Committee on Biotechnology. In what reads like a clever parody, their twenty-four page report argues that plants may well be deserving of nearly the same reverence a human life is due (of course, in practice, these hypocrites would treat plants with greater reverence than human lives, see below). --snip-- Ironically, the great apologist G.K. Chesterton predicted a century ago the move toward plant rights when he discussed animal rights (although he can hardly have been serious when...
  • Thousands Expect Apocalypse in 2012 (imspired partly by Mayan Calander)

    07/06/2008 2:33:49 PM PDT · by Clintonfatigued · 119 replies · 426+ views
    AOL News ^ | July 6, 2008
    - Survival groups around the world are gearing up and counting down to a mysterious date that has been anticipated for thousands of years: Dec. 21, 2012. Across the United States, Canada and throughout Europe, apocalyptic sects and individuals say that is the day that the world as we know it will end, ABCnews.com reports. Ancient Mayan societies, known for their advanced mathematics and astronomy, followed a "long count" calendar that lasted 5,126 years. When their charts are translated to the Gregorian calendar, the international standard used today, time runs out on Dec. 21, 2012. Believers say there are other...
  • Ancient Tablet Ignites Debate on Christianity (feed your faith not your doubts)

    07/05/2008 2:19:29 PM PDT · by theoldmarine · 116 replies · 557+ views
    NY Times ^ | 5 July 2008 | Ethan Bronner
    Tablet Ignites Debate on Messiah and Resurrection By ETHAN BRONNER JERUSALEM — A three-foot-tall tablet with 87 lines of Hebrew that scholars believe dates from the decades just before the birth of Jesus is causing a quiet stir in biblical and archaeological circles, especially because it may speak of a messiah who will rise from the dead after three days. If such a messianic description really is there, it will contribute to a developing re-evaluation of both popular and scholarly views of Jesus...“This is the sign of the son of Joseph. This is the conscious view of Jesus himself. This...
  • Ancient mega-lake discovered in Darfur

    04/16/2007 11:32:40 AM PDT · by bedolido · 11 replies · 319+ views
    environment.newscientist.com ^ | 4-12-2007 | Catherine Brahic
    The discovery of a massive ancient lake in Darfur could help explain how the world’s biggest groundwater reservoir came to be under one of the driest parts of the planet. It is also indisputable evidence that the Sahara was once a wet, green region, researchers claim. Eman Ghoneim at the Boston University Center for Remote Sensing in Massachusetts, US, was using satellite imagery to study the ancient hydrology of north-western Sudan when she noticed a dark, 250-kilometre-long segment on the radar images.
  • DEAD SEA SCROLLS: THREAT TO CHRISTIANITY?

    02/22/2007 9:44:29 AM PST · by stfassisi · 25 replies · 679+ views
    DEAD SEA SCROLLS: THREAT TO CHRISTIANITY? Fr. William Most The first scrolls were found in 1947. Other finds followed: in 1952 Cave 3 was found, including the Copper Scroll. The most important Cave for our purposes was Cave 4, discovered in 1954. About 20% of the scrolls were soon published, but the remainder were held out for 35 years. A 6 year campaign by the Biblical Archaeology Review, led by its Editor, Hershel Shanks, finally resulted in the liberation of the balance. Some photos came to Robert Eisenman of the Dept. of Religious Studies at State University of California at...
  • Giant Pearl Tied to Family Squabbles

    01/30/2005 2:31:56 PM PST · by wagglebee · 82 replies · 2,213+ views
    Las Vegas Sun ^ | 1/29/05 | JON SARCHE/AP
    Legend has it the so-called Pearl of Allah was created as a symbol of peace 2,500 years ago in ancient China. To Victor Barbish, the 14-pound gem has been nothing but a big headache. The football-sized grayish lump has been tied to enough greed, drama and intrigue to rival any Agatha Christie mystery, including two contract killings and a court fight that ended with one of the largest jury awards of its type in Colorado history. "It draws the wrong type of people," said Barbish, the pearl's majority owner who lives in Colorado Springs. "It's only a pearl. It has...
  • AP: Historical Christian Site Said to Be Found [Jesus's First Miracle]

    12/21/2004 1:50:05 PM PST · by West Coast Conservative · 30 replies · 1,599+ views
    AP ^ | Dec. 21, 2004 | LAURIE COPANS
    Among the roots of ancient olive trees, archaeologists have found pieces of large stone jars of the type the Gospel says Jesus used when he turned water into wine at a Jewish wedding in the Galilee village of Cana. They believe these could have been the same kind of vessels the Bible says Jesus used in his first miracle, and that the site where they were found could be the location of biblical Cana. But Bible scholars caution it'll be hard to obtain conclusive proof — especially since experts disagree on exactly where Cana was located. Christian theologians attach great...
  • Remains Of Food Shed Light On Ancient Ways

    11/20/2004 3:16:00 PM PST · by blam · 20 replies · 1,593+ views
    The Bath Chronicle ^ | 11-20-2004 | Ben Murch
    REMAINS OF FOOD SHED LIGHT ON ANCIENT WAYS BY BEN MURCH 11:00 - 20 November 2004 Exotic spices unearthed beneath the Bath Spa show military administrators lived in the lap of luxury in the city's early days. Food and architectural remains found preserved beneath the remains of Roman buildings provide new evidence of the high living enjoyed by the military rulers of what was then Aquae Sulis in the first century AD. The remains were discovered in 1999, but have only just finished being analysed. The ancient grapes, figs, coriander and a peppercorn - along with highly decorative architectural fragments...
  • Decision Due On Hill Of Tara Motorway (Archaeology)

    11/11/2004 4:10:37 PM PST · by blam · 16 replies · 606+ views
    The Guardian (UK)y ^ | 11-11-2004 | Angelique Chrisafis
    Decision due on Hill of Tara motorway Archaeologists say 'heart and soul of Ireland' is threatened Angelique Chrisafis, Ireland correspondent Thursday November 11, 2004 The Guardian (UK) It is Ireland's most sacred stretch of earth and one of the most important ancient landscapes in Europe. The Hill of Tara, with its passage tomb, earthworks and prehistorical burial mounds, is the mythical and ceremonial capital of Ireland, dating back 4,000 years. But now the landscape in county Meath, north-west of Dublin, is the subject of a campaign to save it from what one archaeologist has called the "worst case of state-sponsored...
  • Genghis Khan's Pen As Mighty As His Sword

    08/23/2004 6:46:57 AM PDT · by blam · 26 replies · 1,109+ views
    IOL ^ | 8-23-2004
    Genghis Khan's pen as mighty as his sword? August 23 2004 at 11:45AM Beijing - A Chinese historian says he has evidence that ruthless conqueror and master of the Mongol horde Genghis Khan was as masterful with the pen as he was with the sword. Historians have long assumed the ancient Mongolian ruler was illiterate, primarily because the Mongolian written language was created in the early 13th century, when Genghis Khan would have been in his 40s and not have had time to learn, the official Xinhua news agency said. However, Tengus Bayaryn, a professor at China's Inner Mongolia University,...