Posted on 12/11/2012 7:22:44 AM PST by lbryce
so whales engaged in mass strandings back then, too. reckon that means that the mass strandings we see nowadays might not have that much to do with human activity....
NO! Couldn't be!
Don't worry, some anti-creationist will come up with some "rescuing device" like the "Oort cloud" to explain how this could happen without validating a biblical historical account.
Right...they neatly lined themselves up and committed mass suicide. I think these scientists are nuts!! No common sense.....just a lot of blubber.
The whales got caught up in some religious cult led by a crazy unicorn and committed mass suicide.
Bacon. Bacon can clog your arteries.
And if the whales are diabetic, sugars and starches. Whale diabetes is no joke.
Yes. We all know that whales can’t swim.
Is there anything that enhances the flavor of food quite like bacon and ranch dressing?
If the whales were trapped in a inland lagoon, the water would have dried up and left them stranded,......just as the Ark was stranded on a mountain. There IS evidence everywhere of a worldwide flood. There is more evidence of a flood than there is whales growing legs to become modern day cows.
The water recedes in the creek that flows throw our valley ever summer. Every summer, the birds feed on the fish that died because they did not go back to the lake.
That one will work!
On articles like this one, wouldn’t you think the journalist would include at least one photo of the skeletons, especially since 20 of them are intact?
How many places like this are there? This is the third one I have heard of.
I smell Marshall Applewhite and the Hale-Bopp comet in here somewhere.
Easily overcome. Certainly, the world being completely covered by water would cause chaos. The water may not have been able to sustain much life for whatever reason. The whales may have been trapped after the water settled in the oceans, the whales my have been trapped. Look a the geological history of most regions and you’ll find that it was all covered by “an expansive inland sea.” Lake Lahontan, which covered most of Nevada, would certainly have trapped large amounts of marine life. It’s probably the whales got there when the earth was flooded 4,400 years ago. It’s also possible people carried the whales or bones to the desert.
Never seen fish stranded in pools when a river/tide/flood subsides? I have, not an infrequent occurance. Think fish getting trapped in a pool as the water recedes on a BIG, whale-scale.
Like this: There is a valley, it gets flooded and the flood also covers the mountain range that seperates the valley from the ocean (Great Central Valley of Calif). As the flood waters subside, the whales are still frolicking in this new place they’ve never seen before, and don’t notice that the tops of the mountains are above the water, cutting off their route to the oceean. Time paases, water keeps dropping and the whales all colllect in the deepest part...which eventually becomes their graveyard.
Plausible
Twixt 2 to 7 million years ago, there would have been few to zero human beings around to in any way interpret such a thing. More likely the Great Flood stories are tied to the opening of the Black Sea some 7,000 to 8,000 years ago.
What is geologically interesting is that this Chilean event demonstrates a remarkable rate of uplift along the Andes cordillera.
Praise God....
Wait... there are some opposing views on the “cows/whales” evolution.
Did the cows go back in the water and become whales,
or did the whales venture up on the land and grow legs?
Chicken wing sauce.
The receding of the waters after the Flood could indeed explain this. If the waters had gone over a ridge, and the whales are doing OK in a deep enough pool, but then the waters recede and the ridge traps them in a now diminishing pool—yes, that would fit the case perfectly. I’m not saying that IS the explanation, but it is a realistic possibility. It could have been THE Flood, or perhaps another flood of sufficient size. An analogy would be when the tide comes in and then things are trapped in the tidal pools when the tide goes out.
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