Creationism,
the fundamentalist movement that rejects much of modern science because
it conflicts with a strict literal interpretation of the Bible,
especially the book of Genesis, has its philosophic roots in the
Darwinian debates of the last century Recently this movement has become
a potent political force capable of challenging orthodox science in the
arena of public opinion.
The earth
sciences in particular face a newly focused assault from the
fundamentalist camp. Until recently the claims made for "creation
science" as an alternative to mainstream earth science consisted of a
hodgepodge of geologic ideas floating loosely in time and space.
Lately, its proponents have made more sophisticated attempts to square
geologic evidence with scripture. A broad array of publications now
supply alternative Bible-based earth histories. Using these materials
as ammunition, creationists advocate laws requiring that any teaching
of the scientific theory of evolution in the public schools be
"balanced" by teaching of the "evidence against evolution."
Scientists
have objected strenuously to such laws, since the evidence in question
consists of untestable and pseudo-scientific interpretations derived by
using the Bible as the primary scientific text. If enacted, such laws
would have chilling effects both on science teaching and textbook
content. As the Supreme Court has held, such laws would also violate
the constitution by lending governmental support to a sectarian group's
interpretation of the Bible.
In the
last decade creationists have skirted federal courts by appealing to
state legislatures and local school boards. In such venues the major
scientific resources at hand are the local scientists, most of whom
have only limited knowledge of the claims, methods and arguments of the
creationists. The results have been predictable. Science is on the
defensive, and creationists are gaining credibility in the court of
public opinion.
When creationist
rhetoric reached a boil in our community, I decided to take advantage
of 40 years of geologic teaching and research and the local,
self-proclaimed "largest creation science resource center east of the
Mississippi" to formulate a composite creationist time frame of
geologic events-"creation science s" answer to the geologic time scale
on which students of geology are weaned. The result (Figure 2)
highlights both the creationist arguments and those geologic facts most
difficult for creationists to explain. It thereby provides the
scientific community with access to many creationist positions.
As
a strategy this article proposes that science should abandon its
traditional and failing method of item-by-item rebuttal of creationist
attacks. Instead, science should go on the offensive, using such a time
scale to demand that creationists defend their total view of the
geologic record and all their implausible and commonly ludicrous
"scientific" interpretations.
The New Creationist Geologists
Scientific
creationism, with its attempt to derive explanations for most of the
geologic record from the Noachian flood, has suffered from a
near-vacuum of well-educated geologists in the ranks of its proponents.
The founders of the modern creationist movement included Ph.D.
hydrologist Henry M. Morris and Ph.D. biologist Duane Gish. To lend
credence to their cause, they recruited a number of young evangelical
students to undertake graduate study in geology. Details of how those
young evangelicals, one after another, deserted the creationist cause
after exposure to graduate geologic education is amply detailed and
documented in R. L. Numbers's 1993 book The Creationists.
A
very few evangelicals did manage to survive graduate education in
geology with their Biblical fundamentalist views of earth history
intact. This younger group includes Steven Austin, John Morris and Kurt
Wise (no relation to the author). They have now moved into primary
roles of leadership and authorship in the movement and deserve
individual note.
Steven Austin earned
a Ph.D. in coal geology from the Pennsylvania State University in 1979.
During his Penn State time he also wrote creationist articles under the
pseudonym of Stuart Nevins. Currently he is chair of the Department of
Geology at the Institute for Creation Research (ICR) in southern
California and is a major contributor to their in-house publications
and articles on geology. His Grand Canyon: Monument to Catastrophe
(Austin 1994) is a slick full-color volume designed both as a guide for
fundamentalist field trips into the canyon and as a potential text for
fundamentalist college-level geology courses. In these publications his
scientific philosophy is never in doubt. In Grand Canyon he explains:
"The real battle in regard to understanding the Grand Canyon is founded
not just upon Creation and Noah's Flood versus evolution, but upon
Christianity versus humanism." (Austin 1994)
John
Morris, Henry's son, earned a Ph.D. in geological engineering from the
University of Oklahoma and taught there for several years. In 1984 he
moved to the ICR, which now lists him as president. He has led several
expeditions in search of Noah's ark and has worked on the alleged
coexistence of human and dinosaur tracks in the Paluxy River bed of
Texas. His book, The Young Earth, consists of fundamentalist Sunday
school themes and highly slanted geologic interpretations followed by
70 pages of overheadprojector masters designed to "be shared with your
church or Bible study groups." With his father he has written: "The
data of geology, in our view, should be interpreted in light of the
Scripture, rather than distorting Scripture to accommodate current
geological philosophy" (Morris and Morris 1989)
Kurt
Wise graduated from the University of Chicago with honors in
geophysical sciences before going on to earn his Ph.D. at Harvard under
Stephen Jay Gould by working on details of mollusk classification. Wise
has been the focus of a number of articles in the popular press and
currently teaches at fundamentalist William Jennings Bryan College in
Tennessee. He told a writer for Harper's Magazine in 1996: "I intend to
replace the evolutionary tree with the creationist orchard, separately
created, separately planted by God."
The
rising influence in ICR circles of the likes of Austin, Morris and Wise
has at least modernized the level of geologic debate. Although they are
highly selective in their choice of which geologic data to present,
their level of sophistication contrasts sharply with that of older
creationists, who provided very few links to generally accepted
geologic and paleontologic observations.
Critical
reading of creationist literature is not easy even for a scientist with
extensive geologic training. Particular care is required to detect how
parts of the geologic record are cleverly distorted or ignored or how
obscure literature citations or in-house creationist studies are
expanded into general principles. Time and again, I found myself
confusing pre- and postflood events or mixing creation week events with
flood events. But thanks to the younger generation, there is now enough
detail in recent creationist literature to correlate between their
"young earth" and the "old earth" or standard geologic time scales,
even though the challenge is complicated by widely differing dates,
events and models suggested by various creationist authors.
The
following discussion explains the creationist time scale as I have
managed to compile it. History suggests that detailed explanations and
rebuttals of many items on this time scale will come from creationists.
Scientists seeking more detail might look at T. H. Heaton's article, "A
Young Grand Canyon?" in The Skeptical Inquirer (Heaton 1995), C. G.
Weber's 1980 paper "The Fatal Flaws of Flood Geology" in
Creation/Evolution, or D. A. Young's two fine books (1977,1982), which
upset creationists enough to elicit answers to his points on a
one-by-one basis (Morris and Morris 1989) and an entire book of
rebuttals (Gish 1993).
Creation Week
As
most people are aware, many creationists are called "young earth"
proponents because they accept and defend the Genesis time scale of
events, asserting that the universe and life were created in a single
week and that this event could not have happened more than a few
thousand years ago (Figure 2). The Biblical sequence of events for
creation week is well known and includes phenomena requiring the
suspension of almost all known laws of science. Some creationists even
highlight the discrepancy between the Genesis sequence and the
traditional "evolutionary order of appearance." John Morris (1994)
gives the following comparisons as support for the Biblical sequence of
events. Alternatively, a scientist might find the juxtaposition an
excellent starting point for debate.
The
precise date of creation week in years varies among creationists. A
good discussion of the history of this question starting with the
Bishop of Ussher (1650) is given by W. R. Brice (1982). Henry Morris
(1993) suggests that creation took place about 6,000 years ago and that
the elapsed time from creation to the Noachian flood was 1,656 years.
This means that the flood took place about 2350 B.c., a time somewhat
after the start of recorded human history. John Morris (1994) notes
that some uncertainties exist between the length of the Biblical time
and the historical record but adds, "I suspect it is the secular
chronology which needs revision."
Pre-Flood Earth History
Creationist
pre-flood geology and biology span the period of roughly 1,500 years
between creation week and the global flood that was survived only by
the inhabitants of the ark. Henry Morris (1978) proposes that during
this time lunar craters were formed as collateral damage in cosmic
battles between Satan's angels and those of the Archangel Michael.
Creationists also allege that the thin coating of dust on the moon and
in its craters indicates that both moon and earth are very young. Such
arguments continue to be made despite a recent technical paper by two
creationists (Snelling and Rush 1993) who review the subject and
conclude:
It thus appears that the
amount of meteoritic dust and meteorite debris in the lunar regolith
and surface dust layer, even taking into account the postulated early
intense bombardment, does not contradict the evolutionists'
multi-billion year time scale (while not proving it). Unfortunately,
counter responses by creationists have so far failed because of
spurious arguments or faulty calculations. Thus, until new evidence is
forthcoming, creationists should not continue to use the dust on the
moon as evidence against an old age for the moon and solar system.
Meanwhile,
back on earth, creationist time continues in the Garden of Eden, where
all animals including dinosaurs started out as vegetarians, an
interpretation based on Biblical statements of the absence of death in
Eden prior to the apple incident (Gish 1992). Evidence most commonly
cited for the coexistence of people and dinosaurs prior to the flood
consists of intermingled footprints of dinosaurs and supposed human
beings in bedrock exposed in and along the Paluxy River of central
Texas. The creationist interpretation of these tracks is that they
include human footprints created in early phases of the Noachian flood
just before these evil people and dinosaurs were engulfed.
G.
J. Kuban, a religious man scrupulous about the scientific details of
these footprints, reports (1986) visiting the Paluxy site in the
company of a number of creationists, including John Morris. Kuban's
extensive documentation of the tracks includes stain markings of
obviously nonhuman, three-clawed toes as integral parts of the
"man-tracks." He notes later correspondence with John Morris in which
Morris agrees that all the Taylor Site tracks (the best of the sites)
were probably dinosaurian. In the same issue of Origins Research,
Morris (1986) makes a half-hearted retraction.
Kuban
felt it necessary to draw the lines between science and religion
carefully. In a statement following the article cited above, he wrote:
I
am a Christian and believe in a Creator, but prefer not to be labeled a
"Creationist" or an "Evolutionist," since I do not fully identify with
all the tenets that are often assumed to typify each camp.... Although
my findings are not favorable to the "man track" claims, the objective
of my research has not been to attack Creationism, but to carefully
investigate and document what actually exists on the Paluxy sites
alleged to contain human footprints.... When the full evidence is
brought to light, it is evident that all the Taylor Site tracks are
dinosaurian.
As for the flood itself,
creationist models for the source of the waters stem from the writings
of Isaac Newton Vail, who refined over a 30-year period the "annular
theory" (Vail 1912), in which the early earth had a series of
Saturn-like aqueous rings, the collapse of which caused successive
cataclysms to bury organisms and create fossils. The collapse of the
last ring caused the Noachian flood. Subsequently, most writings
propose only one great canopy, which collapsed to create the flood
(Dillow 1981). Alternative creationist models store most of these
waters within the earth to help create the flood as the Biblical
"fountains of the deep" (Austin et al. 1994).
The
deep structure of the creationist earth also differs somewhat from that
of modern geophysics. The Creation/Evolution newsletter describes a
creation seminar in 1986 where Henry Morris was asked about the
bottomless pit of Revelations 9:1-11. His answer was:
Whenever
Hades or Sheol is referred to in the Bible, it's always down in the
earth, the depths of the earth. So right there in the center of the
earth, apparently there's a great opening that we can't really deal
with in terms of our seismic instruments or other instrumentation. But
apparently it is there. You can take the Bible to mean what it says.
Radiometric Dating
Modern
geologists routinely date progressive evolution of the earth and its
changing life forms by calculating ages of mineral samples containing
concentrations of various radioisotopes and daughter products having
known rates of decay. If "young earth" models have any hope of
viability, creationists must somehow discredit almost all these methods
of mineral dating.
One argument for
doing so involves purported changes in the speed of light. Creationists
argue that if so fundamental a property of nature as light can change,
then all other properties, including rates of radioactive decay, could
also change to yield false dates. Such arguments, though implausible,
were possible up until about 20 years ago when improvements in
instrumentation and methods greatly reduced the error bars on
measurements of the speed of light. For all but the most committed,
these refinements have laid to rest the idea that there are significant
measurable changes in the speed of light (see discussion by Schadewald
1984).
Other creationist claims for a
changing speed of light include redshifts, the lengthening of
wavelengths of light from distant galaxies by up to four times that of
ordinary light. They interpret this as a Doppler effect that should
require the universe to be in violation of Einstein's equations by
expanding faster than the speed of light. Consequently, they argue for
a very young universe in which very rapid changes in the speed of light
merely give the appearance of old age.
The
whole redshift argument is based on the false premise that the redshift
is a Doppler effect caused by the instantaneous movement of cosmic
objects away from each other. In reality, some redshifts are caused by
gravitational slowing of light as it escapes massive objects, but most
reflect the fact that these wavelengths represent a kind of tape
measure embedded in space itself. When the light started, its waves
were of normal lengths. In the intervening eons, the cosmos expanded
along the line of travel, stretching those embedded wavelengths as
measures of the magnitude of long-term expansion of the cosmos itself.
A
more down-to-earth creationist argument for unreliability of
radiometric dating is R. V. Gentry's observation (recapitulated in
Gentry 1992) of tiny halos of radiation damage around minerals embedded
in Precambrian micas. Gentry argues that these halos had to be formed
in primordial granites during the first few minutes of earth history by
some unrecognized, now-extinct, very short-lived radioactive element.
The
confused geology of Gentry's arguments and the geologic facts
concerning his sampling site have been presented by J. R. Wakefield
(1988). Wakefield points out that various kinds of halos of radiation
damage around certain minerals in micas are common and that Gentry's
samples came from dikes that cut Precambrian sedimentary rocks. Thus,
field relations prove that his samples are younger than the sedimentary
deposits and therefore cannot be of primordial origin.
Creationists
commonly cite the "helium problem" as evidence for a young atmosphere
that contradicts radiometric dates (Vardiman 1986 and J. Morris 1994).
Scientists generally recognize that the rate of production of helium
from the earth's crust and mantle exceeds by a factor of 2 to 5 the
Jeans rate of strictly thermal escape from the upper atmosphere Harper
and Jacobsen 1996). If these were the only factors in earth's helium
balance, the creationists' claims of an atmosphere with a maximum age
of only 2 million years might have some merit (J. Morris 1994).
However,
a number of nonthermal processes are capable of accounting for
steady-state atmospheric compositions of earth, Venus, and Mars, as
outlined by B. C. Shizgal and G. C. Arkos (1996). These include
exothermic exchanges of helium and nitrogen ions that can boost helium
ions to escape velocity, as well as the solar wind, which sweeps helium
ions outward along high-latitude open magnetic field lines. The helium
problem remains under active investigation, but its scientific
understanding has gone far beyond the simple thermalescape models still
cited by creationists.
Another common
creationist argument for the "unreliability" of radiometric dates is
Austin's (1994) dating of the Uinkaret lava flows of the Grand Canyon
region. It is generally recognized that some of these flows were so
young that they cascaded over the canyon edges and dammed huge lakes
within it. Austin cites a number of different analyses of these lavas
that can be used to calculate a wide range of radiometric model ages,
some older than the earth itself. He concludes by asking, "Has any
Grand Canyon rock ever been successfully dated?"
There
are many methods of deriving radiometric dates, some widely recognized
as being far more accurate than others; the range of ages Austin cites
merely shows the lack of precision among the cruder methods. For the
most part, Austin used a ham-handed approach by dating whole rocks
rather than individual minerals or parts of individual mineral grains.
He then set up a straw man by culling other dates from the literature
for comparison to complain about the wide spread of the results. In
fact, Wenrich, Billingsley and Blackerby (1995) derived quite precise
dates from these Uinkaret volcanics. Using some of the best
potassium-argon methods, they found a regional pattern of younger and
younger dates moving eastward with time to reach the youngest Grand
Canyon volcanoes only 10,000 years ago, a date in good accord with
erosional history.
Creationist claims
about radiometric dates and their linkage to the supposedly unreliable
fossil record fail to point out the rarity of locations where rocks
with well-controlled fossil dates are closely associated with proper
mineral material for very precise radiometric dates. A few hundred of
these well-dated localities represent the primary control points on
which the entire dating system of the geologic column is based.
Where
such ideal conditions exist, the same horizons yield the same precise
dates even if the locations are continents apart. For instance, Bowring
et al. (1993) used the finest uranium-lead methods to date zircons
associated with the base of the Cambrian in Siberia at 543.9 (+/= 0.2)
million years, whereas in southern Africa, J. P Grotzinger and his
colleagues (1995) found a number of ash beds spanning the same fossil
range, yielding dates from 545 to 539 (+/= 1) million years. In the
Rocky Mountain region, about 20 Cretaceous (140-65 million years old)
ash beds are interlayered with well-known fossil-bearing sequences
recognized both here and in Europe. Precision dating by J. D.
Obradovich (1993) of these ash beds differing by only 0.5 million to 1
million years confirmed the same 1, 2, 3... sequence as that derived
both from fossils and field relationships.
Fossil Stratigraphy, Corals and
Limestones
Since
the beginning of fossil-hunting, the earth's rock layers have yielded a
record of life with a consistent pattern: more and more complex life
forms appear at progressively higher and newer levels. Creationists
argue that this progression shows that during the flood, higher-order
animals ran to the mountaintops to be washed off and buried last, a
"mechanism" originally proposed by George McCready Price (1923).
Recent
refinements of this mammals-to-themountains model have included the
notion that rising waters engulfed first the shoreline plant and animal
communities and then more complex upland flora and fauna. This argument
neglects to discuss why burial sequences for fish, marine reptiles and
marine mammals followed the same pattern of increasing complexity, when
these groups should have been relatively unaffected by rising waters.
In addition, a pre-flood human race without a single individual dumb
enough to be trapped on some isolated mountaintop by early stages of
rising waters would seem to be a miracle in its own right.
Above
all, the creationist model requires the fossil record to be a somewhat
haphazard jumble of odds and ends dumped by the flood, recording only a
generalized sequence of simple to complex life. Creationists allege
that academics consistently warp and misinterpret the
stratigraphic/paleontologic evidence in an attempt to defend cherished
but untenable beliefs about science's particular version of evolution
and the geologic record. One might expand such charges of bias to
include the oil industry, a group of the most hard-headed realists
known, who constantly test geologic and paleontologic predictions with
drillings currently at a worldwide rate of about a meter per second and
who, after a century's experience, continue to delude themselves by
pouring untold billions of dollars into such exploration.
The
thick sedimentary formations that cover large portions of the interior
of North America to average depths of about a kilometer pose especially
difficult problems for the "young earthers." Large percentages of these
deposits consist of former calcareous muds and fossil debris created by
lime-secreting organisms. Production of such volumes during a single
"flood year" would surely require Herculean activity on the part of
those organisms. For instance, in the Grand Canyon region the Redwall
and Kaibab limestone formations are each about 150 meters thick. If
deposition was spread uniformly through the entire flood year, these
two units would require organisms to have produced carbonate mud
deposits at the unbelievable rate of 80 centimeters per day.
Recently
young-earth proponents have used a new twist-rapid tectonic movement-to
obviate the required excessive growth rates for limestones during the
flood year (Austin et al. 1994). In this view, for about 1,500 years
between Eden and the flood, extremely abundant carbonates were produced
by vibrant biological activity in the postulated extremely high carbon
dioxide pressure of those times. Thick carbonate muds collected in
those early ocean basins, only to be hurled onto the continents by
violent runaway subduction during the flood as plates moved at speeds
of 1-10 kilometers per hour, depending on the model. Conceivably this
process might yield the volume of carbonate sediments on the
continents, though hardly the delicate and orderly succession of
fossiliferous limestone and other formations typical of the continental
interior, of the Grand Canyon and elsewhere.
As
for coral reefs, Morris and Morris (1989) argue correctly but somewhat
disingenuously for an absence of great coral reefs in the past. They
cite the claim of S. E. Nevins (Austin's 1975 pseudonym) that some of
the greatest of these, Capitan and the Permian reef complex of west
Texas, comprise mostly transported fossilbearing lime muds rather than
coral. Geologists have long recognized that these particular formations
are banks of carbonate debris, cemented in place into reeflike masses
by algae, sponges and bryozoa, many still preserved in their growth
positions. Other deposits such as the oil-bearing Leduc reefs near
Edmonton, Canada, were true isolated patch reefs, cementing
self-generated debris into isolated wave-resistant masses to thickness
of 300 meters. To most geologists these are definitions of reefs
whether they comprise 100 percent coral or not. In the case of the
Leduc reefs, the oneyear flood model requires an average vertical
growth rate of 0.8 meter per day or 3.5 centimeters per hour, a rate
40,000 times the maximum ever recorded for any modern reef surface
(Chave et al. 1972).
Coal, Salt and Deep Oceanic Sediments
Coal
beds represent compaction of organic materials to 5 to 10 percent of
their original thickness. Hence a typical coal bed might represent the
slow accumulation of 20-30 meters of original swamp material and
require a considerable time span to form. Austin did his doctoral
dissertation (1979) on a single coal bed in Kentucky that might have
formed very quickly He argues that relationships in that bed suggest
formation as a kind of logjam or mat of floating vegetation.
Subsequently, creationists have added the interpretation that such
floating vegetational rafts in Noah's flood were responsible for almost
all coal beds (Major 1990), a common creationist approach of
extrapolating from local example to the entire geologic record.
For
some small coal beds, origin as vegetational mats is a generally
accepted mechanism. For others, such as the Pittsburgh and Kittaning
coals of Pennsylvania and West Virginia, the total area was on the
order of 20,000 square kilometers, with systematic lateral changes and
continuous upward transition from underlying sands and lake beds into
the swamp deposits). The difficulty of collecting such a huge but
orderly logjam as well as providing mechanisms for its survival and
ultimate burial beneath the tumultuous seas of the Biblical flood is
not addressed by creationists.
Thick
salt beds formed by the evaporation of seawater comprise another
problem for creationists. Young-earth geologists interpret almost all
classic stratigraphic units as deposits produced during the flood year:
Hence, interbedded salt formations must have formed as part of those
events. Some of the more extensive salt formations within the U.S. are
in the Paradox Basin of Utah, where they reach a depositional thickness
of 1.5 kilometers with at least 29 separate cycles of salt deposition
(Hite 1960). To deposit just these beds in a single year would require
salt to have formed at a minimum rate of 4 meters per day or 17
centimeters per hour, presumably by evaporation while the flood was in
progress.
For such deposits,
creationists use an ostrich approach. The chemical balance of salt in
the ocean is discussed by Austin and Humphreys (1991) and John Morris
(1994) with brief paragraphs on each of 11 ways that salt can be added
and seven ways it can be removed. The fourth of these removal methods
is halite (salt) deposition, which takes place
as
a result of river water evaporation, not sea water. Actually the ocean
would need to be 20 times more concentrated in salt for deposition to
occur. This happens infrequently in trapped pools but such deposits
redissolve easily. This output is trivial. The volume of salt water
evaporated in trapped lagoons and not redissolved is not significant.
Morris
and Morris (1989) cite the extreme minority view of V I. Sozansky
(1973) that great salt deposits are products of the degasification of
the earth's interior brought up along faults by juvenile waters derived
from volcanic rocks. Nowhere in the Morris and Morris publication is
mention given of the enormous halite deposits common at many times in
the geologic record nor of their generally accepted origin by
continuous evaporation of seawater flowing into semi-restricted basins
in arid regions.
Finally, typical
deep-ocean floors are covered by about 800 meters of sediments (Worzel
1974). The present rates of accumulation of these deepwater sediments
in the North Pacific are 0.2, 0.02, 0.005, and 0.001 millimeter/year
respectively for muds, calcareous ooze, siliceous ooze and red clay
(Berger 1974). Assuming an average deposition rate of 0.01
millimeter/year, the 800-meter accumulation would require 80 million
years, a quite reasonable geologic age for typical ocean basins. "Young
earth" models would require most of this accumulation to take place
late in the flood year, a minimum rate of 2 meters/day or 80 million
times present rates. Alternatively, most of the deposition might have
been in the subsequent 4,500 years, an average of about 20
centimeters/year or only 17,000 times present rates. The very delicate
layering and fine grain size characteristic of these oozes and muds
argue strongly against such wholesale dumping rates. In addition, this
model requires that somehow such catastrophic rates ceased once modern
measurements became possible.
Plate Tectonics
Surprisingly,
most modern creationists accept some variations of plate tectonics. In
one creationist model Henry Morris (1993) proposes that during later
parts of the flood, opening of ocean basins provided a means for
draining waters from the continents. If this opening took place during
the last half of the flood year, the east coast of the U.S. moved to
its present distance 5,500 kilometers from Africa at an opening rate
for the Atlantic of 30 kilometers/day or more than one kilometer per
hour.
An alternative creationist
mechanism proposed by J. R. Baumgardner (1990) and by Austin,
Baumgardner, Kurt Wise and others (1994) suggests that following
earth-core formation, convection and frictional heating by the slowly
moving downgoing slabs of oceanic crust reduced the viscosity of the
earth's mantle by a "factor of a billion" (from rock to Jell-o). The
resuit was a runaway convection system with tectonic plates moving at
"meters per second" (2 meters per second = 4.4 miles per hour),
allowing deep mantle plumes to spew forth steam as the Biblical
"fountains of the deep," condensation of which caused the flood.
The
thermal problems of this model are mind-boggling. At the start,
gravitational energy released by core formation would raise the entire
globe's average temperature by 2,500 degrees Celsius (Birch 1965). To
this, the model requires adding frictional heating from the proposed
runaway subduction as well as the massive heat of condensation of the
collapsing vapor canopy. Even more surface heat was added as brand new
basaltic ocean floors, with minimum melting temperatures of 1,000
degrees Celsius, were spewed out over two-thirds of the earth's surface
beneath miraculously nonboiling flood waters. Finally this cumulative
massive thermal pulse had to dissipate in a few thousand years by
unstated processes to leave most of the earth's surface devoid of hot
springs or any evidence of abnormally high heat flow. The authors
apologize that their model is still in the "formative stages and thus
is incomplete."
In the area of plate
tectonics the creationist views contradict an enormous body of new
data. The last 30 to 40 years have seen plate tectonics grow from an
intriguing theory loosely supported by some data from a few
subdisciplines of geology into a revolutionary paradigm supported by
massive interlocking data arrays from the entire spectrum of the
geosciences. Detailed plate motion directions and velocities with their
passenger continents (DeMets et al. 1990) have been derived from
combinations of geophysics, deep sea drilling, seafloor magnetic
anomalies, and land based structural, geophysical, and sedimentological
studies, the whole cemented by a time framework based on stratigraphic,
paleontologic and radiometric time scales.
Recent
satellite-based Global Positioning System measurements show a 95
percent correlation of present motions and rates with those interpreted
from the plate-tectonic record (Larson, Freymueller and Philipsen
1997). Only the Pacific and Nazca plate interpretations needed some
minor readjustment to fit the data. Because correlations with long-term
velocity determinations must involve some span of geologic time, an
average of 3.16 million years for the Larson et al. data, these
measurements represent an additional test and validation of radiometric
and paleontologic dating methods.
Mount Ararat
Because
Noah's ark in the Biblical story ultimately grounded on Mount Ararat in
modern Turkey, this area has received close attention by creationists.
The top two kilometers of Mt. Ararat's 5.2-kilometer height is a
volcano built over deformed sedimentary rocks. Consequently, the
creationists' model requires that the entire volcanic growth took place
very late in the flood year. This volcano had to violate all laws of
thermal physics in order to cool completely in a few months in time for
the ark to land on it.
Claims of the
discovery of Noah's ark in the Mt. Ararat region continue to abound.
These claims are reviewed by one of the few persons recently allowed
into that region of Turkey (Collins and Fasold 1996). The "ark" claimed
to be found by some is shown to be nothing more than a canoe-shaped
fold of erosionally resistant rocks, a common structure in most
mountain systems. Recently, other scientists have found geologic
evidence that could provide a more reasonable source for the Biblical
flood story. Seismic and drill-core data (Ryan et al. 1997) indicate
that until recently the Black Sea basin contained a freshwater lake
surrounded by vast areas of potential farmland. As polar ice caps
melted, rising ocean waters finally topped the sill at the Dardenelles
and poured into the Black Sea basin at about 5100 B.C. The resulting
floodwaters, of truly Biblical proportions, rose at rates of
decimeters/day to cover permanently 100,000 square kilometers of
agricultural lands. This may well be the source of the Babylonian epic
of Gilgamesh, complete with flood, ark and even birds sent out to
search for dry land, but predating the Biblical version by at least
1,000 years.
Yellowstone and the Grand Canyon
Several
familiar national landmarks have received particular attention in
creationist literature. One set of arguments concerns "polystratate
fossil trees," standing fossil tree stumps that penetrate a number of
beds in the overlying strata. Creationists argue that average rates of
burial based on the traditional geologic time scale would be so slow
that these standing trees would have rotted long before they could be
deeply buried. The key word is average, in that geologists have long
recognized many deposits that represent rapid burial by pulsating
events which may last a few minutes to a few years. These rapid events
are followed by thousands of years in which there is little or no
deposition. The Mount St. Helens ash burials are a good example.
Clearly, such stumps do not require a Noachian flood for their
formation.
In
the Lamar Valley of Yellowstone the fossil remains of somewhere between
10 and 27 such buried forests overlie one another, separated by river
and ash deposits. E. Dorf (1964) counted tree rings on the petrified
wood from these fossils and concluded that at the time of burial the
oldest trees averaged about 200 years in age. This poses a major
difficulty for creationists who would interpret the entire stack as the
deposit of a single year. In early papers W. J. Fritz (1984 and older
papers referenced therein) argued that these layers resulted from
sequential landslides of forested debris from a volcanic flank. Hence
all could have been formed in a single short-lived volcanic event,
something like the Mount St. Helens model widely cited by creationists.
R. F. Yuretich (1984) examined the
field evidence to show that most of the Yellowstone fossil trees are
still in a standing position rooted in their own soil rather than a
Mount St. Helens-type transported jumble of logs and stumps. In reply
to Yuretich, Fritz (1984) notes: "Yuretich's observation of in situ
stumps is compatible with my model ... of transportation of up to 15
percent of the upright stumps. Additional studies on stumps picked to
test the critical points of the slight differences between our models
should show complete agreement." In other words, the multiple levels
are for the most part a series of mature forests that were successively
buried in place.
Another set of
arguments involves strength of materials and soil mechanics in the
Grand Canyon region. In Austin's model (1994), sedimentary rocks of the
Grand Canyon were all deposited during the early part of the flood year
(Figure 5), later to be incised by receding waters to form the present
canyon. Thus, the model requires that newly deposited muds and sands
became strong enough to stand as mile-high canyon walls within a few
years.
Some rocks might exhibit such
early strength; for example, limestones can become lithified soon after
deposition. But most sandstones and shales require major loss of water,
compaction and/or chemical cement to become a strong rock, all
processes that involve significant amounts of time. This is especially
true for very fine-grained muds in which low permeability makes the
complete dewatering of a large mass almost impossible in any short
time. The rapid loading of material on top or withdrawal of lateral
support to squeeze out the water merely causes liquefaction of the
mass. One version is well known to hydraulic engineers as the "sudden
drawdown case," wherein rapid drainage of a canal or river results in
collapse of oversteepened watersoaked cutbanks as flood-swollen rivers
subside. In the very late history of the Grand Canyon, smaller versions
of such massive collapses of water-soaked canyon walls actually
occurred as lava dams were breached by the river and huge temporary
lakes were drained. However, if cutting of the main canyon was
separated from deposition by less than a few years, there should have
been far more widespread, early, massive collapse of almost every shale
formation in the canyon, a completely unrecognized phenomenon.
Ice Age (Singular)
In
the creationist view, removal of the greenhouse effect after canopy
collapse produced one and only one ice age. The Austin et al. (1994)
runaway subduction model includes several hundred years of much warmer
oceans heated by newly formed igneous sea floors over two-thirds of the
globe. It proposes that warmer oceans heated the atmosphere and
facilitated transport of moisture to the poles. Oceanic heat was
counteracted by great increases in the earth's albedo as a result of
volcanic ash produced during flood tectonics. This change cooled the
earth and initiated a single short-lived ice age. Once the ash settled
and cooling of the ocean and its floor was complete, the ice age ended
at about 2000-2500 B.c. To explain the apparent record of multiple
glaciations, M. J. Oard (1990) argued for a very thin, post-flood ice
cap that lasted only 700 years. Periodic surges at its lobes and edges
produced local burial of slightly older glacial materials, all of
essentially the same age.
Real
evidence for multiple glaciation is overwhelming. Older works on
glacial geology (Wright and Frey 1965) describe in great detail
arguments for four major ice ages in the last two million or so years.
This evidence includes welldeveloped soil horizons and subtropical
vegetation overrun by succeeding ice advances. More recent works
(Dawson 1992, Anderson and Borns 1994) support these observations and
further separate the glacial stages into about ten different advances.
In addition, they give evidence of several other very much older
glacial epochs, including one in Africa as well as some Precambrian
ones, which in creationist terms should have been in the warm
"pre-flood" environment of Eden.
Probably
the best argument for the magnitude of ice-age time is the record from
long cores taken through the ice caps of Greenland and Antarctica.
Gish's incorrect statement (1992) that an armored dinosaur had been
found in the ice of Antarctica only confuses the issue: In reality the
fossil was found in Mesozoic rocks of the Santa Marta formation of
Antarctica (Weishampel 1990).
In the
ice cores, summer and winter bands can be counted back, year by year,
at least 30,000 years (Anderson and Borns 1994) with overall core
lengths indicating total time spans of several hundred thousand years.
Younger dates derived by counting the annual layers in the cores can in
turn be correlated with C14 (carbon-14 radiometric) dates from the
CO^sub 2^ contained in entrapped air bubbles, with C^sup 14^ dates from
tree rings that can be counted and correlated back 12,000 years, with
annual sediment layers from glacial lakes, with dates from the pollen
records of climatic change in Europe and America and with radiometric
dates and rate of sedimentation dates on deep-sea cores.
Most
of these dates can in turn be stitched together and mutually supported
by paleomagnetic dates from other areas and other dating techniques
(summaries by Anderson and Borns 1994). As new evidence is gained and
dating techniques are refined, all these lines of converging evidence
show increasingly good correlations with the Malenkovich climatic
cycles. These cycles are based on the celestial mechanics associated
with long-term changes in the ellipticity of the earth's orbit and
changes in the tilt of its axis, and provide an additional set of time
links to modern astronomic measurements. It requires an extreme leap of
faith to argue in the face of such massive and interlocking evidence
that the Ice Ages occurred only in the last few thousand years, at a
time when written history existed in other parts of the globe.
Cooling Rates
In
addition to those models discussed above that involve preposterous
rates of global and sea floor cooling, there is the problem of rapid
cooling of the high-temperature granite masses that now comprise tens
of thousands of cubic kilometers in the cores of almost all great
mountain systems. Creationist models require these bodies to have
cooled completely since 2500 B.C. by mechanisms recorded neither by
general history nor the Bible. Furthermore, these unknown mechanisms
must be so efficient that only a few hot springs remain in most areas
of the globe. Even though the laws of cooling and heat transfer are
well established with their values and applications to geologic
examples provided in many geophysics texts, to date I have found no
attempts by creationists to apply these thermal constraints in any
detail to their models.
Additional
cooling constraints reside in various mineral types associated with
these large granite bodies. The minerals formed at different
temperatures and were able to trap daughter products of radioactive
decay within them, starting at different cooling temperatures.
Radiometric dating of when these different minerals passed through
their retention temperatures allows the determination of cooling rates
within the granite bodies. W. S. Pitcher (1993) provides a summary of
such measurements, which range from 30 to 250 degrees Celsius per
million years, depending on size of body and depth of burial. These
values, in good accord with typical laws of thermal physics for cooling
bodies, further strengthen the case for accuracy of radiometric dating.
The Earth Stands Still
Many
Biblical tales pose special problems for those who would attempt
scientific explanations. One is the story (Joshua 10,12-13) of Joshua
keeping the sun from setting while the Israelites took vengeance on the
Canaanite kings. This was an event that supposedly occurred in the last
few thousand years in the creationist era of relatively normal science,
a time when recorded history existed. Stopping and starting the earth's
rotation should have been accompanied by unbelievably massive
earthquakes and giant tidal waves, phenomena not recorded by other
societies, nor in the geologic record of such young deposits. However,
Henry Morris, in the Defender's Study Bible (1995), says:
Since
the earth rotates on its axis, the sun could only be made to "stand
still" relative to earth by stopping earth's rotation.... This was
surely a unique miracle, but not beyond the capabilities of the Creator
of the sun and moon and planets. He started their motions, has
maintained them through the ages, and is able to change them at will.
As
a "scientific" explanation for this tale, I. Velikovsky (1950) proposed
that a few thousand years ago a comet, later to become the planet
Venus, was ejected from Jupiter to do a nearmiss of the earth, stopping
the earth's rotation and the sun's apparent motion. Velikovsky has been
so thoroughly debated and refuted that restating all the faulty
arguments and questionable data seems pointless. D. Morrison and C. R.
Chapman (1990) list many of these. Velikovsy's mechanism, bad as it
might be, at least pretends to be science. Morris's explanation is
clearly religious and beyond such pretense.
Conclusions
Only
now is the scientific community coming to recognize that although
battles in the last decade to keep creationist pseudo-science out of
public-school science classrooms may have been won in the courts, the
war itself is in serious danger of being lost in the court of public
opinion. L. Kraus (1996) may have made the best statement in a New York
Times Op-Ed piece: "The increasingly blatant nature of the nonsense
uttered with impunity in public discourse is chilling. Our democratic
society is imperiled as much by this as any other single threat,
regardless of whether the origins of the nonsense are religious
fanaticism, simple ignorance or personal gain."
The
creationist strategy has been to portray this debate as a choice
between their cartoon of science or their particular brand of religion.
As scientists, we must emphasize repeatedly that the argument against
creationism is not against religion as such but rather against a fringe
group's attempt to force the Bible into the public schools in the guise
of a science textbook.
Creationists
have always picked here and there at science trying to discredit the
whole by casting doubt on some small piece, largely by misrepresenting
the facts before scientifically unsophisticated audiences. Science has
fallen into a trap by trying to argue about these individual pieces
without forcing creationists to defend their "scientific" worldview.
This has been particularly unfortunate in debates about biological
evolution, in which scientific arguments fall prey to common public
aversions to "monkey ancestors" and to the ease of confusing the public
with complex and unfamiliar biologic processes.
The
rock record may be a much easier point of attack. It offers a fairly
straightforward outline of events and rates of change generally
familiar to most Americans. The total creationist view of earth history
should be exposed in full detail, and its proponents should be forced
to defend it in public debate. Extraordinary claims require
extraordinary levels of proof. The time has come to stop fighting
defensive skirmishes and to start challenging creationists to defend in
toto what they call science-humorous absurdities and all.
| [Reference]
|
| Bibliography |
| Anderson, B. G., and H.W. Borns.1994.
The Ice Age World. Scandinavian University Press, Oslo (and Oxford
University. Press). |
| Austin, S. A.1994. Grand Canyon:
Monument to Catastrophe. |
| Santee,
Calif.: Institution for Creation Research. Austin, S. A.1979.
Depositional Environment of the Kentucky No. 12 Coal Bed (Middle
Pennsylvanian) of Western Kentucky with Special Reference to the Origin
of Coal Lithotypes. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Pennsylvania
State University. |
| Austin, S. A.,
and R. D. Humphreys 1991. The sea's missing salt: A dilemma for
evolutionists. Proceedings of Second International Conference on
Creationism. Pittsburgh, Pa.: Creation Science Fellowship, Inc.,
2:17-33. Austin, S.A., J. R. Baumgardner, D. R. Humphreys, A. A.
Snelling, L. Vardiman and K. P. Wise 1994. Catastrophic plate
tectonics: a global flood model of earth history, Proceedings of Third
International Conference on Creationism, Pittsburgh, Pa.: Creation
Science Fellowship, Inc., pp. 609-621. |
| Baumgardner,
J. R.1994. Runaway subduction as the driving mechanism for the Genesis
flood. Proceedings of Third International Conference on Creationism,
Pittsburgh, Pa.: Creation Science Fellowship, Inc., 2:35-45. Berger, W.
H.1974. Deep-sea sedimentation. In Geology of Continental Margins, ed.
C. A. Burk and C. L. Drake. New York: Springer-Verla. pp. 213242. |
| Birch, F 1965. Energetics of core
formation, Journal of Geo |
| physical Research 70:6217-6221. |
| Bowring,
S.A., J. P. Grotzinger, C. E. Isachsen, A. H. Knoll, S. M. Pelechaty
and P Kolosov.1993. Calculating rates of early Cambrian evolution.
Science 261:1293-1298. Brice, W. R. 1982. Bishop Ussher, John Lightfoot
and the age of creation. Journal of Geological Education 30:1S24.
Chave, K. E., S. V Smith and K. J. Roy. 1972. Carbonate production by
coral reefs. Marine Geology 12:123-140. |
| [Reference]
|
| Collins,
L. G., and D. F Fasold. 1996. Bogus "Noah's Ark" from Turkey exposed as
a common geologic structure. Journal of Geologic Education 44:439444.
Coney, P. J. 1975. Geologic cross section of the Cedar
Breaks-Zion-Grand Canyon Region. Poster by Zion Natural History
Associaton, Zion National Park, Springdale, Utah. |
| Creation/Evolution Newsletter. 1986.
Berkeley, Calif.: |
| National
Center for Science Education. Dawson, A. G.1992. Ice Age Earth, Late
Quaternary Geology and Climate. London: Routledge Press. Dietz, R. S.,
and J. C. Holden. 1987. Creation/Evolution Satiricon: Creationism
Bashed. Winthrop, Wash.: Bookmaker. |
| Dillow,
J. C.1981. The Waters Above (Foreword by Henry Morris). Chicago: Moody
Bible Institute. DeMets, C., R. G. Gordon, D. E Argus and S.
Stein.1990. Current plate motions. Geophysical Journal International
101:425-478. |
| Dorf, E. 1964. The
petrified forests of Yellowstone Park. Scientific American
210:4:106-114. Fritz, W. J. 1984. Comment (and reply by Yuretich) on
"Yellowstone fossil forests: New evidence for burial in place." Geology
12:10:638-639. Gentry, R.V. 1992. Creation's Tiny Mystery. Knoxville,
Tenn.: Earth Science Associates. |
| Gish, D. 1992. Dinosaurs by Design.
El Cajon, Calif: Creation Life Publishers, Master Books. |
| [Reference]
|
| Gish,
D. T.1993. Creation Scientists Answer Their Critics. El Cajon, Calif.:
Institute for Creation Research. Grotzinger, J. P, S. A. Bowring, B. Z.
Saylor and A. J. Kaufman. 1995. Biostratigraphic and geochronologic
constraints on early animal evolution. Science 270:598604. |
| Harper,
C. L., and S. B. Jacobsen 1996. Noble gases and earth's accretion.
Science 273:1814-1818. Heaton, T. H.1995. A young Grand Canyon? The
Skeptical Inquirer 19:3:33-36. |
| Hite,
R. J. 1960. Statigraphy of the saline facies of the Paradox Member of
the Hermosa Formation of southeastern Utah and southwestern Colorado.
Four Corners Geological Association, 3rd Annual Field Conference
Guidebook, pp. 86-89. |
| Hudson, J.
1964. Sedimentation rates in relation to the Phanerozoic time scale. In
"The Phanerozoic Time Scale, a Symposium," ed. W. B. Harland, G. Smith
and B. Wilcook. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London
120S:37-42. |
| Kraus, L. 1996. Equal time for
nonsense. The New York Times July 29. |
| Kuban, G. J.1986. The Taylor Site
"man tracks." Origins Research 9:1:1, 7-9. |
| [Reference]
|
| Larson,
K. M., J. T. Freymueller and S. Philipsen. 1997. Global plate
velocities from the Global Positioning System. Journal of Geophysical
Research 102:9961-9981. Major, T. J. 1990. Genesis and the origin of
coal and oil. Creation Science Monograph #1. Montgomery, Ala.:
Apologetics Press, Inc. |
| Morris, H.
M. 1978. The Remarkable Birth of Planet Earth. Minneapolis, Minn.:
Bethany Fellowship, Inc. Morris, H. M., and John D. Morris. 1989.
Science, Scripture, and the Young Earth. El Cajon, Calif: Institute for
Creation Research. |
| Morris, H. M. 1993. Biblical
Creationism. Grand Rapids, |
| Mich.: Baker Books. |
| Morris, H. M. 1995. The Defender's
Study Bible. Grand Rapids, Mich.: World Publishing, Inc. (Commentary on
Joshua 10:11-10:14.) |
| Morris, J.1986. Follow up on the
Paluxy mystery. Origins Research 9:1:14. |
| [Reference]
|
| Morris,
J. D. 1994. The Young Earth. Colorado Springs, Colo.: Creation-Life
Publishers, Inc. Morrison, D., and C. R. Chapman 1990. The new cata |
| strophism.
The Skeptical Inquirer 14:2:141-157. Nevins, S. E. (pseudonym of S. A.
Austin). 1975. Is the Capitan Limestone a fossil reef? In Speak to the
Earth, ed. G. E.Howe. Philadelphia: Presbyterian and Reformed Co., pp.
16-59. |
| Numbers, R. L. 1982. Creationism in
the 20th Century. |
| Science 218:538-544. |
| Numbers, R. L. 1993. The
Creationists: The Evolution of Scientific Creationism. Berkeley:
University of California Press. |
| Oard,
M. J.1990. An Ice Age Caused by the Genesis Flood. El Cajon, Calif.:
Institute for Creation Research. Obradovich, J. D.1993. A Cretaceous
Time Scale. In Evolution of the Western Interior Basin, ed. W. G. E.
Caldwell and E. G. Kauffman. Geological Association of Canada, Special
Paper 39, pp. 379-396. Price, G. McC. 1923. The New Geology. Mountain
View, |
| Calif: Pacific Press
Publishing Association. Pitcher, W. S.1993. The Nature and Origin of
Granite. London: Blackie Academic and Professional Press. Ryan, W. B.
E, and nine others.1997. An abrupt drown |
| ing
of the Black Sea shelf. Marine Geology 138:119-126. Schadewald, R.
1984. Creationist conference recasts physics, cosmology, and geology.
The Skeptical Inquirer 8:2:98101. |
| [Reference]
|
| Shizgal,
B. D., and G. G. Arkos. 1996. Non-thermal escape of the atmospheres of
Venus, Earth, and Mars. Reviews of Geophysics 34:4:483-505. Sozansky,
V. I. 1973. Geologic notes, origins of salt deposits in deep-water
basins of Atlantic Ocean. American Association of Petroleum Geologists
Bulletin 57:590 (Review by Porfir'ev in American Association of
Petroleum Geologists Bulletin 58:2543). Snelling, A. A,. and D. R.
Rush.1993. Moon dust and the age of the solar system. Creation Ex
Nihilo Technical Journal 7:1:2-42. |
| Vail, Isaac N.1912. The Earth's
Annular System or the Waters above the Firmament. Pasadena, Calif:
Annular World Co. |
| Vardiman,
L. 1986. The age of the earth's atmosphere estimated by helium content.
Proceedings of the First International Conference on Creationism.
Pittsburgh, Pa.: Creation Science Fellowship, 2:187-195. Velikovsky, I.
1950. Worlds in Collision. New York: Dell |
| Publishing Company, Inc. |
| Wakefield,
J. R. 1988. Gentry's tiny mystery-unsupported by geology.
Creation/Evolution 22:13-33. Weber, C. G. 1980. The fatal flaws of
flood geology. Cre |
| ation/ Evolution 1:1:24-37. |
| Weishampel,
D. B.1990. Dinosaurian distribution. In The Dinosaurs, ed. Weishampel
et al. Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 63-139. |
| Wenrich,
K. J., G. H. Billingsley, and B. A. Blackerby. 1995. Spatial migration
and compositional change of Miocene-Quaternary magmatism in the western
Grand Canyon. Journal of Geophysical Research 100, B7:10417-10440. |
| Worzel,
J. L. 1974. Standard continental and oceanic structure. In Geology of
Continental Margins, ed. C. A. Burk and C. L. Drake. New York:
Springer-Verlag, Pp 59-66. |
| Wright, H. E., and D. G. Frey,
eds.1965. The Quaternary of the |
| United
States. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. Young, D. A.1977.
Creation and the Flood. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Book House. |
| Young, D. A. 1982. Christianity and
the Age of the Earth. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Zondervan Publishing House. |
| [Author
Affiliation] |
| Donald
LI. Wise is n research associate at Franklin and Marshall College an)ld
professor emeritus nt the University of Massnclltts, where he chaired
the Department nt of Geology and Geograpy from 1984 to 1988. He earned
his Ph.D. in 1957 from Princeton University and joined the UMass
factlty in 1969. His wide-ranging research interests have included
Appalachian and Rocky Mountain tectonics, frachure mechanics, global
sea-level controls, Martian tectonics and the origin of the moon.
Around the time of the first lunar landing in 1968-69, he served as
chief scientist and deputy director of one of NASA'S offices of lunar
exploration. Address: Department of Geosciences, Franklin and Marshall
College, Lancaster, PA 17604. Interiet: d_ieise@acad..fandm.edu. |