"And every living substance was destroyed which was upon the face of
the ground, both man, and cattle, and the creeping things, and the fowl
of the heaven; and they were destroyed from the earth: and Noah only
remained alive, and they that were with him in the ark." (Genesis 7:23)
People today are concerned about the
eventual depletion of the oil and coal supplies of the world. The
economics of all the world's nations are largely dependent upon these
"fossil fuels," as they are called.
And they are called "fossils"
because they apparently once were living organisms, somehow buried in
vast sediments and later compressed and converted into oil and coal and
combustible gas. How could this have happened?
Evolutionists speculate that
hundreds of millions of years of slow processes must have been involved,
but the details of such processes are very uncertain. Coal and oil can
be produced in a matter of hours in modern laboratories under
appropriate conditions of heat and pressure. Recent studies by creation
scientists have proved that at least the great coal beds (and even
diamond mines) contain modern radiocarbon, so must have been formed
recently.
Although evolutionists ridicule the
idea of a world-destroying hydraulic cataclysm in Noah's day, that
phenomenon really does provide the most reasonable explanation for all
these phenomena.
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