Bone Yards: Massive, colossal, graveyards all around the World!
Many of the following examples include marine and land animals buried together; a practical impossibility, except for a massive, catastrophic global flood.
Desert Finds
· Sahara Desert, Africa: two sauropods (huge long-necked dinosaurs) piled on top of one another, covered in river sediments; victims of a great flood, per Paul Sareno, on the National Geographic special "Dinosaur Fever", December 13, 1998
· Egyptian Whales: Fossils in a kitchen counter; countertop mfgr. in Italy, discovered a fossil in a slab of limestone marble that was being cut and ground for a high-end kitchen counter; the marble was from Egypt, a region that is 95% desert; paleontologists have been digging up whale bones there for decades; per National Geographic, Egypt's desert is littered with marine life; it is an area "...once covered by the ocean" (millions of years ago!)
· Atacama; Northern Chile: a six hundred mile desert strip, 7000' (1.33 miles) above sea level, representing the driest place in the world (50 times drier than Death valley, in California); no life form, nothing rots (indigenous people buried there well preserved-few microorganisms survive that can break down body tissues); Giant 4.5' tall penguins, Baleen whale fossils, myriads of megalodon teeth (gigantic forerunner to today's Great White shark, up to 60' long, 5' mouth openings, w-teeth up to 8" long!), ammonites and other marine fossils thrown around in an ancient flood deposit (see side bar above), prove the ocean water level in the area was once much greater than one mile above current sea level; in order for this to be true, the ocean water covering the Atacama could not have but covered an area far greater than local coverage, in all directions (in other words, this and other mountain fossil graveyards are by no means the product of "local" flooding); in fact, given the impracticality and the improbability of a sloping or ramping up of the ocean so as to cover the Atacama, it therefore cannot be but that at the time when ocean waters rose to a level higher than one mile over normal, all water levels worldwide must also have risen, which means that flooding was promoted at all similar levels all around the world! Thus, a 7000' rise in sea level so that the Atacama is covered, mandates a 7000' rise, wherever there is ocean water (see expert from answers.com, at the beginning of this piece.). Hence, when the Chilean Desert was covered, so was most if not all similar points American, the Mt. Etna caves, in Sicily and the Gobi, in Mongolia!
· Gobi Desert: dinosaur beds; "bone yard of the lost world"; 3000' to 5000' above sea level; 300 miles of rocky desert, the world's fifth largest, entirely sand on the western end; known for its important paleontological finds, which include mammals, the first dinosaur eggs and coal (an organic mineral and energy source, containing the remains of plants and animals, meaning it is a "fossil" fuel)
African finds
· Karoo Formation, of southern Africa: immense and densely packed with bones (some claim 800 billion vertebrate animals, a number that may be a bit farfetched); bones are still sticking out of the ground, after years of collecting; sediment composition is mostly sandstone and shale, up to 20,000' deep, across hundreds of miles (800 billion may not be so farfetched after all)! It is unmatched by any other fossil find anywhere else on earth. There is no way to account for this or any other such pile-up of bones, apart from the uplift imparted by a massive, surging flood of waters. It is not the consequence of millions of years of creatures falling on top of each other in death.
Asian Finds
· China, Jiayuguan: Chicken Bone Hill & Pao Te Hsien; the Liaoning fossil beds, site of dinosaur remains containing soft tissue and feathers; ancient relative of T. Rex; other massive fossil finds in China
· Monogolia, 2 days drive from Ulan Bator: 187 parrot-beaked dinosaurs (6.5' lizard, with a mouth like a parrot), all found within an area of only several square miles, fossilized at the same time, obviously rapidly buried in a water-borne sediment.
· Siberian Russia: "The pinnacle of the great fossil graveyards must be that of the Arctic and Siberia." Mammoths-an estimated five million-thousands of them, found "flash" frozen, as it were, in the permafrost, in northern Russia (while standing on their feet, alive, apparently before they could be overcome, lifted, and drowned by the flood waters!), along with elephants, horses, lions, foxes, camels and other species.
· West Indies, Guadeloupe: extremely hard limestone slab, almost a mile long-per records from the 18th century-containing the skeletons of many humans, who resemble modern day mankind; in a contradiction of "time", per geologists, the 25 million year old rock actually lies 7' to 10' below a coral reef that (conversely, also by geological/paleontological reckoning) is only 1 million years old.
Australian Finds
Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=A._Mitchell
Many of the following examples include marine and land animals buried together; a practical impossibility, except for a massive, catastrophic global flood.
Desert Finds
· Sahara Desert, Africa: two sauropods (huge long-necked dinosaurs) piled on top of one another, covered in river sediments; victims of a great flood, per Paul Sareno, on the National Geographic special "Dinosaur Fever", December 13, 1998
· Egyptian Whales: Fossils in a kitchen counter; countertop mfgr. in Italy, discovered a fossil in a slab of limestone marble that was being cut and ground for a high-end kitchen counter; the marble was from Egypt, a region that is 95% desert; paleontologists have been digging up whale bones there for decades; per National Geographic, Egypt's desert is littered with marine life; it is an area "...once covered by the ocean" (millions of years ago!)
· Atacama; Northern Chile: a six hundred mile desert strip, 7000' (1.33 miles) above sea level, representing the driest place in the world (50 times drier than Death valley, in California); no life form, nothing rots (indigenous people buried there well preserved-few microorganisms survive that can break down body tissues); Giant 4.5' tall penguins, Baleen whale fossils, myriads of megalodon teeth (gigantic forerunner to today's Great White shark, up to 60' long, 5' mouth openings, w-teeth up to 8" long!), ammonites and other marine fossils thrown around in an ancient flood deposit (see side bar above), prove the ocean water level in the area was once much greater than one mile above current sea level; in order for this to be true, the ocean water covering the Atacama could not have but covered an area far greater than local coverage, in all directions (in other words, this and other mountain fossil graveyards are by no means the product of "local" flooding); in fact, given the impracticality and the improbability of a sloping or ramping up of the ocean so as to cover the Atacama, it therefore cannot be but that at the time when ocean waters rose to a level higher than one mile over normal, all water levels worldwide must also have risen, which means that flooding was promoted at all similar levels all around the world! Thus, a 7000' rise in sea level so that the Atacama is covered, mandates a 7000' rise, wherever there is ocean water (see expert from answers.com, at the beginning of this piece.). Hence, when the Chilean Desert was covered, so was most if not all similar points American, the Mt. Etna caves, in Sicily and the Gobi, in Mongolia!
· Gobi Desert: dinosaur beds; "bone yard of the lost world"; 3000' to 5000' above sea level; 300 miles of rocky desert, the world's fifth largest, entirely sand on the western end; known for its important paleontological finds, which include mammals, the first dinosaur eggs and coal (an organic mineral and energy source, containing the remains of plants and animals, meaning it is a "fossil" fuel)
African finds
· Karoo Formation, of southern Africa: immense and densely packed with bones (some claim 800 billion vertebrate animals, a number that may be a bit farfetched); bones are still sticking out of the ground, after years of collecting; sediment composition is mostly sandstone and shale, up to 20,000' deep, across hundreds of miles (800 billion may not be so farfetched after all)! It is unmatched by any other fossil find anywhere else on earth. There is no way to account for this or any other such pile-up of bones, apart from the uplift imparted by a massive, surging flood of waters. It is not the consequence of millions of years of creatures falling on top of each other in death.
Asian Finds
· China, Jiayuguan: Chicken Bone Hill & Pao Te Hsien; the Liaoning fossil beds, site of dinosaur remains containing soft tissue and feathers; ancient relative of T. Rex; other massive fossil finds in China
· Monogolia, 2 days drive from Ulan Bator: 187 parrot-beaked dinosaurs (6.5' lizard, with a mouth like a parrot), all found within an area of only several square miles, fossilized at the same time, obviously rapidly buried in a water-borne sediment.
· Siberian Russia: "The pinnacle of the great fossil graveyards must be that of the Arctic and Siberia." Mammoths-an estimated five million-thousands of them, found "flash" frozen, as it were, in the permafrost, in northern Russia (while standing on their feet, alive, apparently before they could be overcome, lifted, and drowned by the flood waters!), along with elephants, horses, lions, foxes, camels and other species.
· West Indies, Guadeloupe: extremely hard limestone slab, almost a mile long-per records from the 18th century-containing the skeletons of many humans, who resemble modern day mankind; in a contradiction of "time", per geologists, the 25 million year old rock actually lies 7' to 10' below a coral reef that (conversely, also by geological/paleontological reckoning) is only 1 million years old.
Australian Finds
Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=A._Mitchell
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