Mr. Rex's Dino Dig

What could be more fun than playing in a
white sand dino dig? Children will be able to experience the
work of a
paleontologist as they try to uncover a special stone
for a prize.
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If
you would like to learn more about fossils, read below:
Where Are Fossils Found?
by
John D. Morris, Ph.D.*
Fossils are typically found in sedimentary rock,
almost all of which were originally deposited as
sediments by moving water. Subsequent processes hardened
them into sedimentary rock, as overlying pressure
squeezed the water out and the grains were cemented
together. Often plants and animals were trapped, being
buried in the sediments. As the sediments hardened into
sedimentary rock, the dead things hardened into fossils.
The vast majority of visible fossils are marine
invertebrates, animals that live in the sea and have no
backbone, mostly animals with a hard outer shell. This
would include clams, coral, brachiopods, ammonites, and
other animals familiar to us, as well as extinct animals
like trilobites and crinoids. In some locations the
deposits are dominated by fish fossils and more rarely
insects.
Interestingly enough, while sedimentary rocks are
found in most places, fossils are not so easy to find.
Lots of sedimentary rocks contain no recognizable
fossils at all, other than microscopic remains such as
plankton, pollen, or spores. For instance, Grand Canyon,
with thick sequences of sedimentary rock, contains
surprisingly few fossils. This explains the excitement
over the discovery of billions of two-foot long
nautiloids in the Redwall Limestone by ICR's Steve
Austin. "Fossils are where you find them"
paleontologists say, and these fossils were found as
creationists did their research from a creationist/flood
perspective. They found what evolutionist/uniformitarian
seekers missed.
The sedimentary rocks in which the fossils are found
usually give evidence of rapid catastrophic deposition.
The Grand
Canyon nautiloids were trapped and buried by an
extensive underwater gravity flow of mud covering what
is now portions of several states, at least. Other Grand
Canyon layers like the Bright Angel Shale and the Kaibab
Limestone are equally widespread and are also thought to
have resulted from catastrophic processes. They contain
little more than fragments of fossils in a jumble of
transported pieces.
One more thing. These catastrophically deposited
marine fossils, entombed as they are in regionally
extensive sedimentary rock, are all found on the
continents! There are hardly any marine fossils
found in the deep ocean basins.
The standard evolutionary view is that from time to
time over the eons, a calm and placid sea covered what
is now the continents. Over the millions of years of
living and dying and coming and going the fossils were
preserved as sediments slowly collected on the ocean
bottom. But is there a better understanding? Let's
summarize.
Marine fossils are found in rock layers which give
testimony to dynamic water processes having deposited
them. The layers themselves cover vast areas, sometimes
on a continental or hemispherical scale. And they are
prominently on today's continents.
Rather than demanding the conclusion of long ages of
uniformity and evolution, the fossils speak of a time
when the oceans fully destroyed the continents,
employing catastrophic hydraulic and tectonic forces—a
flood on a scale not witnessed today. Just such a flood
was witnessed in yesteryear, however, and recorded for
our edification in Genesis. It was the great Flood of
Noah's day.
*Dr. John
D. Morris is President of ICR.
Source -
ICR
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