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What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

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Page 1: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?
Page 2: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

“Answering Some Common Objections”

Page 3: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What about comparative anatomy?

Page 4: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What about comparative anatomy?

Page 5: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What about comparative anatomy?

Page 6: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What About Vestigial Organs?

Page 7: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

OLD EARTH?

What about the earliest historical records?

What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What about the age of the earth?

Page 8: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

OLD EARTH?

What about DNA?

What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What about the age of the earth?

Page 9: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

OLD EARTH?

What about rapid mountain uplift?

What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What about the age of the earth?

Page 10: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What About RapidMountain Uplift?

"An ongoing enigma for the standard geological community is why all the high mountain ranges of the world --

including the Himalayas, the Alps, the Andes, and the Rockies -- experienced most of the uplift to their present elevations in what amounts to a blink of an eye, relative to the standard geological time scale.  In terms of this time scale, these mountain ranges have all undergone

several kilometers of vertical uplift since the beginning of the Pliocene about five million years ago.  This presents a profound difficulty for uniformitarian thinking because the

driving forces responsible for mountain building are assumed to have been operating steadily at roughly the

same slow rates as are observed in today's world for... the past several hundred million years."

Page 11: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

(Genesis 2:7)

And the LORD God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into

his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living being. (NKJV)

Page 12: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What About Scientific Dating Techniques?

Page 13: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What About Scientific Dating Techniques?

Page 14: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What About Scientific Dating Techniques?

Page 15: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What About Scientific Dating Techniques?

Page 16: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What about Dinosaurs?

"alleged human bones in the

Carboniferous coal deposits. If

authenticated as human, these bones

would blow the theory of evolution out of the water."

- Richard Dawkins, Oxford, Free Inquiry, V.21, No.4,

10/11/2001

Page 17: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What about Dinosaurs?

Taylor Trail:

Page 18: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What about Dinosaurs?

Taylor Trail:

Page 19: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What about Dinosaurs?

Ryals Track:

Page 20: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What about Dinosaurs?

Burdick Track:

Page 21: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What about Dinosaurs?

(Job 40:15-24) "Look now at the behemoth, which I made along with you; He

eats grass like an ox. See now, his strength is in his hips, And his power is in his stomach muscles. He moves his tail like a cedar; The sinews of his thighs are tightly knit. His bones are like beams of bronze, His ribs like bars of iron. He is the first of the ways of God; Only He who made him can bring near His sword. Surely the mountains yield food for him, And all the beasts of the field play there. He lies under the lotus

trees, In a covert of reeds and marsh. The lotus trees cover him with their shade; The willows by the brook surround him.

Indeed the river may rage, Yet he is not disturbed; He is confident, though the Jordan gushes into his mouth, Though he takes it in his eyes, Or one pierces his nose with a snare.

(NKJV)

Page 22: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

What about Dinosaurs?

Page 23: What about the earliest historical records? What is the time on the “Earth Clocks”?

(Genesis 7:6-7)

Noah was six hundred years old when the floodwaters were on the earth.

So Noah, with his sons, his wife, and his sons' wives, went into the ark

because of the waters of the flood. (NKJV)