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05-10-2007, 02:03 PM | #141 | |
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(Perhaps the mods should have acted however they seem to be very, very slow to notice skeptic integrity accusations. And perhaps 'bogus theory' is a grey area.) So, noting the moderator dormancy ... exactly what did I write about the Exodus and Arabia that is supposedly "bogus" ? Specific "bogus" words, s'il vous plait. And your claimed proof or evidence of bogusity. Thanks. Shalom, Steven |
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05-10-2007, 02:12 PM | #142 | ||
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05-10-2007, 02:16 PM | #143 | |
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So please try to explain this again, perhaps using a set of conjectured years. Thanks. Shalom, Steven |
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05-10-2007, 02:18 PM | #144 | |
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Above sea level? Help me out here ... If you're talking altitude, look to the Himalayas ... Produced by the Indian subcontinent's impact (over millions of years) with Asia ... :wave: |
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05-10-2007, 02:20 PM | #145 | |
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Which one will it be ? You were the one who tried the driveby so you make the decision. Shalom, Steven |
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05-10-2007, 02:24 PM | #146 | |
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Ever hear of an example? Plate tectonics is not just a theory, it's not just a good idea, we can watch it happen. It just goes really slowly ... It's all about large hunks of cooled rock (continental plates) 'floating' on the liquid of magma below and toward the core of the Earth. Some places the magma pushes upward more here or there and produces new material for the crust (like the mid-Atlantic Ridge), which also pushes the plates into each other, slowly, but with lots of force. Now ... take some playdoh, and make two slabs, and push them toward each other on a table. What happens? When one goes under the other, we see 'subduction', which raises one plate, whilst pushing the other down and melting some of the plate back onto magma. But sometimes they just 'smush', and the resulting pile goes higher and higher. Hence you get something like the Himalayas. (And if you need to be sure, check Sedimentology and genesis of the Cenozoic sediments of northwestern Himalayas (India), by R. S. Chaudhri; International Journal of Earth Sciences, Volume 64, Number 1 / December, 1975, pp. 958-977) I'm guessing you missed out on Earth Science back in school, huh? |
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05-10-2007, 02:28 PM | #147 | ||
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The moderators tend to try to move these discussion into the other den. I would prefer not as we have a discussion crew here and I am limited as to how many threads and sections on which I will post. Thanks. Shalom, Steven Avery |
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05-10-2007, 02:34 PM | #148 | ||
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05-10-2007, 02:34 PM | #149 | ||
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RED DAVE has merely been asking: Quote:
Please, the suspense is killing me here. Just answer those questions ... |
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05-10-2007, 02:39 PM | #150 |
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Just another really nice reference that isn't quite as dramatic as the full-blown Himalayas, but does includes stuff on 'sea floor spreading' and 'geotectonics', in case you need, praxeus.
Foraminiferal Biostratigraphy, Biogeography, and Environment of the Callovian Sequence, Rajasthan, Northwestern India, Prabha Kalia; Sudip Chowdhury, Micropaleontology, Vol. 29, No. 3. (1983), pp. 223-254. |
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