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Author | Topic: Evolution. We Have The Fossils. We Win. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
edge Member (Idle past 1736 days) Posts: 4696 From: Colorado, USA Joined:
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My views are based on observation of the physical world, including the view that there was no Jurassic time period or any other time period. The physical realities deducible from the the Geological Column say so, not Genesis.
You have not seen 'the physical world'. You have seen a schematic cross-section of the Colorado Plateau.
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PaulK Member Posts: 17828 Joined: Member Rating: 2.3 |
quote: Nobody says that the rocks ARE time periods Faith. That’s just something you made up.
quote: In your opinion. And your opinion is worthless. As you demonstrated in the very first sentence.
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Minnemooseus Member Posts: 3945 From: Duluth, Minnesota, U.S. (West end of Lake Superior) Joined: Member Rating: 10.0
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Faith, I really do try to be nice to you, but...
In the company of nongeologists you really shouldn't use such terms as "slickensides" or "thrust faults" or "shear fabric" etc. If you look at faults that occurred recently between dry lithified rocks you might see the shearing you keep missing at the Great Unconformity and that might be because wet rocks wouldn't behave in quite the same way. You'd have more unimpeded abrasion between dry rocks, more likelihood of producing a rubble-free sign of scraping between them. While it's nice to try to keep the technical jargon to a minimum, I am shocked that a fault expert of your magnitude doesn't know the meaning of "slickensides" (or the other terms). Google away. That second above quoted doesn't quite make sense to me, but the "rubble-free sign of scraping" comes pretty close to defining "slickensides". Your conversations with Edge reminds me of a musician conversion I once heard on MTV. Singer Jon Bon Jovi was chatting with a guitarist that was guesting on his recording session, and Jon was in the process of telling the guitarist how he wanted something played. Part way through a sentence, Jon stopped and said "Here I am telling Jeff Beck how to play the guitar".. . . . . From the Jeff Beck wikipedia page:
quote: Moose ps - The great unconformity is not a fault. In faulting there is something called the fault plane. It is the planar surface where one rock unit moves relative to the other rock unit. The great unconformity is not remotely a planar surface.
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Faith  Suspended Member (Idle past 1474 days) Posts: 35298 From: Nevada, USA Joined: |
Gotta rewrite this
Edited by Faith, : No reason given. Edited by Faith, : No reason given. Edited by Faith, : No reason given. Edited by Faith, : No reason given. Edited by Faith, : No reason given.
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Faith  Suspended Member (Idle past 1474 days) Posts: 35298 From: Nevada, USA Joined: |
I do need an explanation, and it's hard to read that chart I'm afraid. Too much white.
But Percy (and others too), describes an ordinary land surface with animals on it, the kind we all see every day, and then acts like that lumpy variegated surface, to some depth of course, could just turn into a flat sedimentary rock if only enough dirt got piled on it. This hits me as utterly impossible, and I don't see how your chart addresses this.
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Faith  Suspended Member (Idle past 1474 days) Posts: 35298 From: Nevada, USA Joined: |
Nobody says that the rocks ARE time periods Faith. That’s just something you made up. Of course nobody thinks of them that way. I'm the one saying that's what's really going on here. I get the impression nobody has thought about it at all because if anyone did think about it I don't see how it could be avoided and the absurdity should become apparent. Many have clearly said they picture the whole time period landscape on the site of the rock itself; others come along and deny it though how they could avoid that idea I can't fathom, and in any case what they think they think is not at all clear. But on a rock that covers most of North America, for instance, thinking it through back to the supposed time period has a flat thick layer of wet sediment where the rock now is, and even if it supposedly took aeons of time to form, the thing is ONLY a flat wet layer of sediment that nothing could live on and that displaces any possible living surface. If such a surface existed anywhere during any of that period it doesn't show up in the massive thick single-sediment rock that now represents it. Edited by Faith, : No reason given. Edited by Faith, : No reason given.
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PaulK Member Posts: 17828 Joined: Member Rating: 2.3
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quote: Nobody else is saying it because it is literally insane.
quote: I get the impression that you made up some crazy nonsense and won’t admit that it’s idiotically wrong. The fact that you run away from explaining it is rather strong evidence in favour of my view and against yours.
quote: That is neither true nor relevant. Changing the subject rather than supporting your claim is proof that even you know it isn’t obvious. There are areas where we find the remains of landscapes but nobody thinks that was the landscape for an entire geological period. Nobody thinks that the erosion happened instantly - even to say that what we find is a snapshot of the surface as it was when deposition restarted would likely be an oversimplification, even if the processes leading to lithification are not considered. Even you admit that the surfaces where footprints are found were surfaces at one point and that animals were there.
quote: Do you really think that the Sahara desert is a slab of wet sediment on which nothing could possibly live? How about the Nile delta? The Florida Everglades ?
quote: You’re the only one that thinks that such a surface existed. So if the evidence says it doesn’t, you’re the one who is wrong.
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Faith  Suspended Member (Idle past 1474 days) Posts: 35298 From: Nevada, USA Joined: |
Nobody else is saying it because it is literally insane. I agree. Sad to say but this centerpiece of historical geology is indeed literally insane, and yes I'm sure that's why people avoid noticing it. It's like the idea that God invented fossils as "sports," that is it's an example of that old style pre-scientific way of thinking that still rules in the historical sciences. Edited by Faith, : No reason given.
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PaulK Member Posts: 17828 Joined: Member Rating: 2.3 |
quote: You agree that you invented a crazy straw man ?
quote: The idea that rocks are time periods is not a part of geology. It’s just stupid nonsense you made up. We don’t avoid noticing it any more than we avoid noticing that you are the AntiChrist. Even if you think you are.
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Percy Member Posts: 22505 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 4.9 |
Faith writes: You don't have evidence,...Facts are facts and we share those... If we don't have evidence then how can we have facts, which are evidence? And how can we share facts when you dismiss most facts, such as radiometric dating, and sedimentation still adding to the geologic column, and the geologic column extending to the present, and life living on, above and within Earth's surface in the past just like it does today, and so on.
...that's the point I keep making, you have a lot of imaginative conjurings. Apparently you all don't know the difference. And apparently you can't explain how our evidence is "imaginative conjurings." You either engage in name-calling or make up fantasies.
...but the Old Earth interpretations are not scientifically valid, just one speculative guess on top of another called science, big big shuck. This is another good example of you calling things names instead of examining the evidence and explaining what it really means in an interpretive framework based upon reality.
You're mistaking general acceptance for genuine science. It's called consensus. And we don't believe something true because there's a consensus. Rather, we think a consensus tends to develop around those things that are likely true, because of the supporting evidence. --Percy
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Percy Member Posts: 22505 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 4.9 |
Minnemooseus writes: My impression is that Faith is misusing Walther's Law less than Percy is misusing Walther's Law. Hey, it's about time Faith had some help. Good for you!
Walther's Law states the geometric relationship between vertical and horizontal sedimentary sequences from migrating depositional environments. Walther's Law is NOT really a depositional model (despite often being used as such at evcforum.net), and time (long or short) is not part of Walther's Law, despite Percy's repeated insistence that it is. Since motion is time, and since Walther's Law describes what happens when a depositional environment moves across a landscape, time is an inherent component of Walther's Law. That's not a particularly significant thing to say, since time is always a factor in geological change. Change takes time (and it happens at a particular point in time, though that aspect is not inherent in Walther's Law). From the Wikipedia paragraph on Walther's Law:
quote: Note the part about the depositional environment migrating laterally. That occurs over time. From WALTHER'S LAW AND VERTICAL FACIES CHANGES (colors and italics are from the original):
quote: Take particular notice of these parts:
So I think we can dispense with the notion of Walther's Law not involving time.
Walther's Law was originally formulated to describe the sediment geometries resulting from migrating stream. It also applies to transgressive and regressive sea deposits, which is the relevant thing in the here "flood" discussion. Why did you say that bit about time if you knew you were next going to talk about migrating streams (occurs over time) and transgressions and regressions (occur over time)?
Essentially, Walther's Law states (related to changing sea levels) that if you find a clastic sedimentary stratigraphy (stratigraphic column) at a given location and it is getting progressively finer in the upward direction, you are seeing deposits of a transgressing (rising) sea. If you find that it is getting progressively coarser in the upward direction, you are seeing deposits of a regressive (falling) sea. How fast the sea is rising or falling is not relevant. This entire paragraph is describing things that occur over time.
In the old Earth model, new clasitic sediment is slowly being added as the sea rises over a long time period (thousands to millions of years). Over this long time period, a lot of sediment can accumulate. There's time poking in its ugly nose again. You're making better arguments that time is part of Walther's Law than I was. I don't think I misunderstand you when you said, "Time (long or short) is not part of Walther's Law, despite Percy's repeated insistence that it is," but nothing you've said since supports that view, so why did you say it?
In the young Earth model (aka Faith flood model), new clastic sediment is quickly being added as the sea rises over a short time period (a year or less?). Over this short time period, a lot of sediment can accumulate. This isn't the Faith model. The Faith Model, in brief and leaving fossil objects out of it, works like this:
Do you really see a proper application of Walther's Law in there?
Either model could result in the same or similar clastic sediment geometry. Were Faith's model not physically impossible (e.g., the maintenance in the seas of separation of sediment types often held in orders opposite to their size/density, such as sand above slit) then sure, either model works. But there's that little problem of Faith's model being physically impossible. And definitely not an application of Walther's Law. Flood waters spreading across a landscape is not Walther's Law. You never explained how I'm misusing Walther's Law. Was it just the time thing? Sorry if I bungled any explanations or left a bunch of typos, I'm up against a schedule, gotta go. --Percy
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edge Member (Idle past 1736 days) Posts: 4696 From: Colorado, USA Joined: |
From WALTHER'S LAW AND VERTICAL FACIES CHANGES (colors and italics are from the original):
I think we are seeing why first-year students have a hard time wrapping their heads around Walther's Law. In fact, after reading this exchange, I think I'm confused as well. And, thinking back on it, probably most professors don't really introduce the topic properly. (direct quote snipped for brevity) Take particular notice of these parts: "...different sedimentary environments over time..."...changes in sea level, or changes in subsidence and sedimentation rates." As laterally-adjacent sedimentary environments shift back and forth through time... Given enough time... ...laterally adjacent sedimentary environments migrating over one another through time. So I think we can dispense with the notion of Walther's Law not involving time. It would seem that Walther's Law is easier to understand that it is to describe. Yes, it is an explanation of geometry, but a process and time for it to act are necessary elements. However, the point I'd like to make is that if Walther's Law is a law, it should tell us what WILL happen under certain conditions. Basically, he says that if there are laterally adjacent depositional environments, one will always be found above the other nearby (assuming, of course, no major discontinuities such as an unconformity). And really, there isn't any choice. That is because the different environments are migrating due to changes in sea level which occur over time and the sedimentary succession is growing. Once we add the time element in the process of transgression, it makes sense. As I have said before, time is the main thing that Faith does not have, and that makes the whole data set incomprehensible. Consequently, unknown processes and jinns become necessary to complete the Faith model. Edited by edge, : No reason given.
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Faith  Suspended Member (Idle past 1474 days) Posts: 35298 From: Nevada, USA Joined: |
moose writes: Faith to edge writes: In the company of nongeologists you really shouldn't use such terms as "slickensides" or "thrust faults" or "shear fabric" etc... If you look at faults that occurred recently between dry lithified rocks you might see the shearing you keep missing at the Great Unconformity and that might be because wet rocks wouldn't behave in quite the same way. You'd have more unimpeded abrasion between dry rocks, more likelihood of producing a rubble-free sign of scraping between them. While it's nice to try to keep the technical jargon to a minimum, I am shocked that a fault expert of your magnitude doesn't know the meaning of "slickensides" (or the other terms). Google away.That second above quoted doesn't quite make sense to me, but the "rubble-free sign of scraping" comes pretty close to defining "slickensides". I was trying to say why movement between wet rocks might not produce "slickensides." Of all the things I say that you could call snark I'm surprised to find these included. I did look up slickensides and even used it later, but thrust fault and shear fabric seemed too much. I haven't spent any time thinking about faults and didn't even think of the Great Unconformity as a fault in my scenario, but I suppose I have to start. Anyway the terminology related to faults hasn't yet become part of my argument. Sometimes I get the impression edge likes to try to trip me up by using terms or concepts he knows I wouldn't know, but apparently in this case he did try to find other terms and wasn't able to, so I feel bad about making an issue of it. As for the other statements I had just figured out that the fact that the rocks were still soaked might make a difference in how a geologist would think of movement between them. I'm always hoping to find an explanation for an idea I like in a way a geologists isn't just going to dismiss. The basic scenario I keep describing of movement at the GU keeps getting dismissed as not having the marks of shearing which are apparently absolutely necessary if my scenario is correct. Well, I've been growing fonder and fonder of my scenario over time so I'm trying to find a way it could have occurred without leaving those marks. It just hit me yesterday that he may not be taking into account the idea that the rocks were just formed and still saturated with water though highly compacted. I'm picturing a block of clay that's wet but has all the excess moisture squeezed out of it so it's as solid as it can get in that condition. I tjem si ===================ABE...drat I posted this without noticing I must have typo'd a bracket by mistake so I lost at least half of what I'd written. I'm not up to trying to repeat it right now. Edited by Faith, : No reason given.
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edge Member (Idle past 1736 days) Posts: 4696 From: Colorado, USA Joined: |
I was trying to say why movement between wet rocks might not produce "slickensides."
Okay, then, there would be soft-sediment deformation features everywhere along the unconformity.
Sometimes I get the impression edge likes to try to trip me up by using terms or concepts he knows I wouldn't know, but apparently in this case he did try to find other terms and wasn't able to, so I feel bad about making an issue of it.
Put a simply as possible, geology has complexities that are hard to explain without using some jargon, especially when edge is tired after a long day.
As for the other statements I had just figured out that the fact that the rocks were still soaked might make a difference in how a geologist would think of movement between them.
It is hard to see how rock buried under two miles of younger sediment could have much water in it and wouldn't be to some degree lithified. And besides, soft-sediments also show deformation.
I'm always hoping to find an explanation for an idea I like in a way a geologists isn't just going to dismiss. The basic scenario I keep describing of movement at the GU keeps getting dismissed as not having the marks of shearing which are apparently absolutely necessary if my scenario is correct. Well, I've been growing fonder and fonder of my scenario over time so I'm trying to find a way it could have occurred without leaving those marks. It just hit me yesterday that he may not be taking into account the idea that the rocks were just formed and still saturated with water though highly compacted. I'm picturing a block of clay that's wet but has all the excess moisture squeezed out of it so it's as solid as it can get in that condition.
All the more reason it should show deformation.
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Faith  Suspended Member (Idle past 1474 days) Posts: 35298 From: Nevada, USA Joined: |
All I care about concerning Walther's Law is that it shows that rising sea water forms layers.
Moose said it should occur in my scenario as well as the OE scenario. I guess you disagree.
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