Tuesday, February 23, 2021

What's so Grand about the Grand Staircase? with Dr. Steve Austin





What i have to say on the debate between catastrophe based geology and Slo Mo geology is that both have their place in terms of understanding what you see..  What i find missing is a linkage with deep sea geology.  A mile of mud dropped on a crustal craton high above seal level is one thing.  Just where is the mile of mud on top of the deep sea bed?  And why are the deep trenches not well filled with erosional debris from the side walls.

I understand that Cloud Cosmology provides for a hollow earth scenario including an inner ocean likely holding as much water as the earths surface.  This provides the driving engine able to produce a global flood as culturally described.  anything else just falls completely short.  The actual rise would have taken many days before it reversed. and may also have produced pulses as would the actual global cisculation  Thus the multi directional directing of sedimentation actually works for just one central event.

Then we had the scouring of the Arctic as it all wound down.

Yet much of the vrust is formed from thin sediments clearly formed over vast tracts of time.  We have not begun to imagine unraveling the two phenomena let alone look for other cases.


What's so Grand about the Grand Staircase? - Dr. Steve Austin



Taken from "Beyond Is Genesis History? Vol 1 : Rocks & Fossils." Check it out on our website:


http://bit.ly/BIGH-1​ After you’ve watched the documentary film and want to learn more, this is your next step. Explore the impact of the global flood on the Earth in these 20 new videos featuring scientists from the film. ☞ Purchase all three in the series here: https://bit.ly/BIGH-Set​ We follow geologist Steve Austin and Del Tackett to Arizona where we can see the Grand Staircase, a thick stack of rock layers which are visible as sets of parallel cliffs above the Grand Canyon. He then explains how the history of the world is best viewed through a Flood geology model as a five-step process: Sedimentation, Tectonics, Erosion, Volcanoes and Exponential decline. Steve then talks briefly about his experience as a creationist geologist. Dr. Austin is a field research geologist who has done research on six of the seven continents of the world. His research has taken him by helicopter into the crater on Mount St. Helens, by bush plane onto glaciers in Alaska, by raft through the Grand Canyon, on horseback into the high Sierra, by elevator into the world’s deepest coal mines, by SCUBA onto the Great Barrier Reef, by rail into Korean backcountry, by foot onto barren plateaus of southern Argentina, and by four-wheel drive into remote desert areas of Israel, Jordan and Saudi Arabia. Dr. Austin received his PhD from Pennsylvania State University in sedimentary geology. For more information on Dr. Steve Austin, please go to https://bit.ly/34i18pj​.


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