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/article/erosion-mount-st-helens
Steven A. Austin, Ph.D. - Published in: Origins, volume 11, number 2, pp. 90–98, 1984. © 1984 Geoscience Research Institute, 11060 Campus Street, Loma Linda, California, 92350, USA. All Rights Reserved. Abstract How rapidly can a canyon form? Mount...

/article/did-landscapes-evolve
Steven A. Austin, Ph.D. - The most popular theories for the origin of the form of the earth's surface features suppose that they have been sculptured during vast time periods by erosive processes similar in rate, scale and intensity to modern processes. The theory that...

/article/did-early-earth-have-reducing-atmosphere
Steven A. Austin, Ph.D. - After reviewing evolutionists' speculations on the origin of life, Clemmey and Badham say, "... the dogma has arisen that Earth's early atmosphere was anoxic,..."1 By "anoxic" they mean an atmosphere without free oxygen gas (O2),...

/article/springs-ocean
Steven A. Austin, Ph.D. - A CHALLENGE One of the most profound and moving experiences in the life of the Old Testament patriarch Job must have been his encounter with a whirlwind. At a time when Job's undeserved suffering led him to a point of despair, God...

/article/origin-limestone-caves
Steven A. Austin, Ph.D. - INTRODUCTION A cave is a natural opening or cavity within the earth, generally extending from the earth's surface to beyond the zone of light. Three generic classes of caves can be recognized according to the major sculpturing process: (1) caves...

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