Quote Originally Posted by _Martyr_
I point you towards the Vostok or EPICA ice cores which can be dated to 420,000 and 720,000 years respectively. These cores are many km long, having been drilled vertically downward into the ice caps. When the cores are examined, the snowfall of each year can be chemically and otherwise examined, and then by adding up the number of anual layers, we get the age of the oldest layer. How do you explain this? Snow that fell 620,000 years before the earth was formed?
Or, they happened in a very short period of time. Such as the sedimentary layers that were layed in one day when Mount St. Helens erupted. Approx. 400 feet of stratum was formed where evolutionists insists it takes millions of years.
http://www.answersingenesis.org/docs...6st_helens.asp
http://www.icr.org/index.php?module=...=view&page=261

Quote Originally Posted by _Martyr_
Also, explain sedamentary rock, the existence of fossils in general, fossil fuels which came from once living organisms, pretty much the entire area of radiometric dating (explain Pb/Pb isochron age of the earth as about 4.55 (+- 1%) billion years for instance...), the common age of the rest of the solar system, I could go on and on...
I read once that scientist in Australia have discovered a way of making sedimentary rock using natural processes. (sorry I don't have that link at the moment.)
Fossils exist because of the world wide flood.
This is an interesting article of fossil fules - http://www.answersingenesis.org/tj/v11/i3/coal.asp
Radioactive decay - http://www.icr.org/index.php?module=...=view&page=207
Radioisotope Dating of Grand Canyon Rocks: Another Devastating Failure for Long-Age Geology - http://www.icr.org/index.php?module=...n=view&page=42
I could go on and on...