ICR Publishes University-Level Earth Science Textbook


The Flood Explains Cold Slabs Deep in the Mantle

Two recent studies by different groups have concluded essentially the same thing: there are mysterious cold rock slabs at the bottom of Earth’s mantle that cannot be explained by conventional theories.1,2 Geophysicists typically color these colder rocks blue, as shown in the image.

Theodore Roosevelt National Park: Testimony to the Receding Flood

by Tim Clarey, Ph.D., and Mike Mueller, M.S.*


Fossil Footprints Fit Flood Ice-Age Model

Anthropologists Thomas Urban (Cornell University) and Daron Duke (Far Western Anthropological Research Group) recently found preserved human footprints on an Air Force testing range located on the salt flats of Utah.1 These footprints are called “ghost tracks” because they are very hard to see except after rainfall when moisture can make them visible.


Deep-Sea Volcano Gives Glimpse of Flood Eruptions

A team of scientists from Australia and the USA recently studied the ejecta from a subsea volcano, gaining new insights into how magma can explode to the surface from deep underwater.1 This discovery also gives important insight into volcanic activity during the Flood year when many volcanoes originated while still underwater.

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