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.


Bronze Age Tsunami Reminiscent of the Flood

Evolutionary scientists discovered an ancient tsunami victim and a dog skeleton at ÇeÅŸme-BaÄŸlararası, a settlement on the coast of Turkey.1 The researchers also found numerous marine shells mixed within the enveloping sediments, indicating that the waves washed in from the ocean.


Welsh Dinosaur Tracks Found in Flood Rocks

A group of evolutionary scientists from the United Kingdom and France recently unearthed a large track-bearing surface in southern Wales.1 They speculate that these prints are from a bipedal prosauropod2 dinosaur, similar to Plateosaurus, common across Europe. But their interpretation has one major issue.


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.

Carlsbad Caverns National Park: Fast Formations

by Dave Woetzel, M.S., and Brian Thomas, Ph.D.*

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