whatever writes:
Mr. Jack, In a massive floating debris, you would have plenty of grass, leaves, tangled within the brush and trees floating above the waters so the worms could breathe, cause they too would be above the waters, cause the waters would flow through keeping everything moist, maintaining favorable habitats.
Actually, no. worms "breathe" by getting oxygen directly through their skin. Let us assume that somehow the worms were able to stay above water without falling off of the debris for 40 days and that they don't starve to death during that time, since it supposedly rained for 40 days and 40 nights the worms would have been constantly be wet all over during all that period. 40 days and 40 nights is more than long enough to suffocate them all.
You can do an experiment at home. Get an earthworm and put it in a glass. Put some water in but not too much. Allow enough space above for the worm to go above the water. Let it sit there for 40 days. Don't forget to keep pouring water into the glass if it starts to evaporate.
Gary, The solution to pollution might well be dilution, with all the fresh water today continually flowing into the oceans, they can not measure an increase in salinity, not that its not increasing, but Noah would of had fresh water to drink,
This is nonsense. Yes, there are a lot of rivers that flow directly into the ocean. But the ocean also loses water through evaporation. It's a never ending cycle. Water evaporate from the ocean, the evaporated water condense and rain down on land and into rivers, rivers flow back into the oceans, and the water evaporate again.
By the way, I'm just making sure, not that I want to insult your intelligence. The Na+ and Cl- ions don't evaporate along with the water. They remain with the solvent.
and the mixing action of the ocean would of buffered salinity changes preserving salt water habitats
What the hell is "mixing action of the ocean"?
corals, some if not all worms too perhaps would of survived as larvaes until conditions were right for them to hatch, many insects likely perished but too survived as larvae on these massive islands of debris that floated in mass to the massive fossil coal grave yards evident all across the world(some of these massive coal fields are hundreds of feet thick, thousands of miles long, hundreds of miles wide)depending on how the waters washed the worm habitat(floating debris) to the different respective coal yards of the world, all supporting evidence it was a world Flood.
Ignoring all the nonsense in this part, let us go back to the being wet issue. It supposedly rained for 40 days and 40 nights. That meant that everything on the surface was completely wet for 40 days and 40 nights. Wouldn't all the larvae suffocated to death, then? Larvae need oxygen too, you know.
The Laminator
For goodness's sake, please vote Democrat this November!