The hydroplate theory.
About Walt Brown:
Walt Brown received a Ph.D. in mechanical engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where he was a National Science Foundation Fellow. He has taught college courses in physics, mathematics, and computer science. Brown is a retired Air Force full colonel, West Point graduate, and former Army Ranger and paratrooper. Assignments during his 21 years of military service included: Director of Benét Laboratories (a major research, development, and engineering facility); tenured associate professor at the U.S. Air Force Academy; and Chief of Science and Technology Studies at the Air War College. For much of his life Walt Brown was an evolutionist, but after years of study, he became convinced of the scientific validity of creation and a global flood. Since retiring from the military, Dr. Brown has been the Director of the Center for Scientific Creation and has worked full time in research, writing, and teaching on creation and the flood.
More About The Hydroplate Theory and the Creation:
www.creationscience.com
There you can also order the book.
Simply amazing
mansanraps 6 days ago
I just heard of this from thunderfoot. Is this guy actually serious? It's amazing how far Christians imagination will go from reality to support their bible.
truckcompany 2 weeks ago
@thesacredcowtipper Regardless, this isn't even worth continuing to disprove, this theory will rightfully never gain traction. Have fun tipping sacred cows my friend.
phillipphansen 1 month ago
@thesacredcowtipper What are you even talking about? It's extremely common knowledge (or so I thought) that gravity points to the center of mass, If i throw a ball into the air at any latitude or longitude it comes straight down, never to the side. There's no "hill" to go down.
phillipphansen 1 month ago
@thesacredcowtipper Why then are the tectonic plates still moving? Why are mountain ranges still growing? It is indisputable that the Himalayan mountain range increases in height above sea level every year, and that the distance between South America and Africa increases every year. Also the fossil records on the coasts of both continents indicate that they were once in very close proximity to each other, if not completely contiguous.
phillipphansen 1 month ago
@thesacredcowtipper If all the fossils were created at the same time, why are they at different stages of material transformation? The more ancient ones (millions of years old in actuality) have completely converted to calcite and aragonite, none of the original organic structure remains, just the atoms. However, more recent fossils (thousands of years old) still retain these features. Any freshman Earth scientist or middle school geography teacher could point out these inconsistencies.
phillipphansen 1 month ago
@phillipphansen Hi Phil,
ARen't you assuming that we know every law of physics? We do not even know much about gravity yet. Isnt' he giving you an idea of what it would look like if the waters were there and the plates were cracked in half? They would go downhill if the (1) earth cracked open as he presents it, (2) the subterranean waters beneath gushed out from the extreme pressure and )3) therefore leaving a huge void below thsoe plates where the water once was. :)
thesacredcowtipper 1 month ago
@thesacredcowtipper Even if somehow there was a "hill" whose slope wrapped around the Earth, there's no way they would slide so fast as to create the transformations he describes. As far as aquifers under ground, ever been in a cave? You can see the water seeping into the Earths crust, look at the droplets falling from the ceiling. 8000' is nothing, less than two miles. He also says a sediment cloud that accompanied the water burst was the reason for all the fossils we see. (cont)
phillipphansen 1 month ago
@thesacredcowtipper Dude, common sense easily defeats the hypothesis proposed in this video. Lets see... Plates sliding downhill lubricated by water created mountains and trenches. The tectonic plates are so massive they have no concept of "downhill". They are so large that they curve with the Earth, any slope would be offset by the other side of plate. Gravity pulls them towards Earth's center, not "downhill". (cont)
phillipphansen 1 month ago
@phillipphansen By the way, he calls it a theory. And it sure does make a ton of sense and explains just about everything we see today. I don't mean to slam you and maybe I am wrong for doing so but check out what I stated. The earthquake man caused just happened on Dec. 31st, 2011 in Mahoning County, Ohio. This theory would also explain why there is so much natural gas 3,000' below the surface (clinton shale), 5,000' (marcellus shale) & 8,000' (utica shale) that deep into the earth.
thesacredcowtipper 1 month ago 2