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.


The Tonga Volcano Eruption and the Ice Age

On January 15, 2022, an underwater volcano in the Pacific Ocean’s Kingdom of Tonga erupted with the energy of hundreds of Hiroshima-size atom bombs.1 Both the resulting column of ash and the shock front that rippled away from the eruption could be seen from satellites in space.1,2


Evidence Supports Post-Flood Wet Climate for Egypt

Evolutionary scientists found evidence that the Sahara Desert was green and fertile at the end of the Ice Age, allowing people to live hundreds of miles west of the Nile River.1 These findings corroborate creationist predictions of an extended wet period after the Flood.2


Flood Evidence Clearly Seen by Geologist

One evolutionary geologist sees the evidence of massive and prolonged water flow across the American West. He admits that current explanations have not identified any source for the water, and he’s calling for a rather drastic flip in secular geologic history to explain his observations, including proposing an earlier ice age.


New Evidence of Flood in Grand Canyon

The Coconino Sandstone, famously exposed near the top of Grand Canyon’s splendid sedimentary layers, remains a controversial rock. Two counterclaims vie for its origin. If wind formed the Coconino’s now-hardened sand dunes, then the whole region must have been dry land exposed to the air—unlike the Bible’s portrayal of a worldwide Flood.

Pages

Subscribe to Flood Geology