Flood Buried Dinosaurs with a Bang

Scientists from the University of Bath have found that dinosaurs were thriving up to the end of the Cretaceous.1 This discovery conflicts with earlier claims that dinosaurs were declining in number towards the top of the Cretaceous System.1 However, these findings fit the predictions from a global Flood scenario.


Even Sherlock Holmes Can’t Explain African Dinosaurs

A new species of duck-billed dinosaur, Ajnabia odysseus, was recently unearthed in North Africa.1 This is the first hadrosaur-type dinosaur ever discovered on the continent of Africa, and it creates a conundrum for evolutionary scientists because its location doesn’t fit their narrative.


Sudden Appearance of Flowering Plants Fit Flood Model

A new study published in Nature Ecology & Evolution has claimed that flowering plants, the most common type of plant on Earth, first appeared in small numbers in rocks of the Early Cretaceous.


Evolutionists Struggle to Explain Canadian-Australian Connection

A new species of a split-footed lacewing was recently unearthed in British Columbia, Canada, creating a bit of controversy among secular paleontologists.1 All living relatives of this insect reside exclusively in Australia today.1 So, why are fossils of this insect found in Canada?


Plates Wobble Before Big Quakes

A new study published in Nature has found that tectonic plates may change directions rapidly, or “wobble,” several months before a massive quake is released.1 Scientists are not sure why, but it may lead to a future breakthrough in earthquake predictions.

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