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- Title
The Bighorn Basin, Wyoming--Monument to the Flood: Part I: The Flooding Stage.
- Authors
Oard, Michael J.
- Abstract
The relatively small Bighorn Basin and its surrounding mountains are a striking display of every phase of the Flood, as well as pre- Flood rocks and post-Flood glaciation. The Great Unconformity is seen at several locations; the granite and gneiss beneath it are Creation Week rocks. Many thousands of feet of sedimentary rocks were laid above it during the ascending phase. This event can be called the Great Deposition. Many of these strata can be traced for up to thousands of miles and show little or no internal erosion. Both features support Flood deposition but contradict uniformitarianism. Dinosaur bones and tracks, commonly found along the edge of the Bighorn Basin, can be explained as having formed between Day 40 and Day 120 of the Flood.
- Subjects
BIGHORN Basin (Wyo.); FLOODS; GLACIATION; SEDIMENTARY rocks; SEDIMENTATION &; deposition
- Publication
Creation Research Society Quarterly, 2017, Vol 53, Issue 3, p206
- ISSN
0092-9166
- Publication type
Article