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SESD | Just throwing some different thinking your way. I agree with the water below the crust. And obviously we have huge amou ts there today. Now picture a huge ring of water under the earth's crust (it never rained till the flood, so makes sense for vegetation) that burst upward causing the fault lines. The water that left allowed the crust to sink, hence oceans and such. No shifting of continents in the pangea form. The crust just sank. All the crust is connected, so how would major shifting happen. Also, mountain could've formed rapidly from the plates moving and colliding with one another. Picture two pieces of semiflexible material being slid together. At the "splice" they would be forced to move upward. No real good explanation from evolution on building up mountains when everything should in theory level off over time through erosion. | |
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