| Research
Fossil First New Discoveries Page |
|
As our Creation Research team rubs it in
to evolutionists. On a Field trip in Kentucky, Vance Nelson
unearthed a spectacular fossil specimen (photo below).
On one side was a plant fossil that today grows in the
mountains of Tennessee and Kentucky. In the same layer
were shells that John Mackay readily identified as belonging
to the Lingula group. They are found living today in mud
off the Australian coast.
“How would you mix highland plants with Australian
sea shells and bury them in the same rock?” The
field trippers quickly answered, “The water on
the land which had to be higher than the plants, ripped
them up, then took them to wherever the sea shells were.”
All agreed that calling this a flood deposit seemed
the only logical thing to do. Since these plant and
shells are still present in the world, the fossils also
were no help to the theory of evolution.
Project
listed April 2004.
|
|
| |
| See
Site
Map for full catalogue and links to
this web site. |
|
|
|