Join the Sep. 21-23, 2023 virtual (online) conference that offers possible answers to some of the most puzzling questions in earth science, such as:
Why do we find amino acids on asteroids, and limestone in comets?
What produced the world’s massive volume of sedimentary rock?
Why is the near side of the moon so different from the far side?
Why are there seashells on top of Mt. Everest?
Why is radioactivity associated with continental granites?
The Hydroplate Theory offers a Biblical, yet scientific, scenario for how the global flood of Noah’s day completely rearranged the surface of the globe. It solves many of the problems that plague other tectonic theories. It out-performed NASA in predicting what would be found in comets and asteroids.
Image
Mid-Atlantic Ridge forming
In addition to a dozen presentations by eight speakers, we will also offer a virtual “field trip” to the Grand Canyon to find out how it may have formed.
Yes, you can afford this conference! We only suggest a small donation, which is optional, and left up to you (suggested donation $20, students $10).
For schedule information and registration, visit: HYDROPLATE.ORG
To order Book I, go here; for Book II, go here. You can also access the Lulu.com website and search for the book title, Restoring The Truth About Origins: Book I (or Book II). For more information, see this page.
We are not aware of how advanced the antediluvians were with meteorological sciences or how high the civilization reached technologically. We find many fascinating objects buried in coal that are believed to come from that period. It is considered that the first attempts to predict the weather were around 650 BC in the Babylon Empire. By the third century BC the Chinese had developed “a meteorological calendar that divided the year into twenty-four festivals, each dedicated to a different meteorological situation.”
Abiogenesis, the idea that life sprang from unguided chemistry, continues to be a central topic in the creation/evolution debate. On May 19, 2023, Dr. James Tour, a Messianic Jew, organic chemistry professor at Rice University, and well-known associate of intelligent design advocates, debated Mr. Dave Farina, aka “Professor Dave,” on the question of the origin of life (Fig. 1). 1
I‘ve been reading Inspired Evidence by Julie Von Vett and Bruce Malone for quite a while now, and it is awesome because it provides a new page of inspired evidence for a Biblical worldview every single day for all 365 of them. These authors actually made Romans 1:20 come alive for me:
For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even his eternal power and Godhead; so that they are without excuse. (KJV)
This month we will continue our tour of the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences (NCMNS) 1
given from a biblical creation perspective. TASC and Reasons2Believe, 2
This month I decided to take you on a tour of a museum, a Creation Tour, that is. TASC and Reasons2Believe, 1
an apologetics organization headed by Ben LaCorte, have joined forces to create a tour of the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences (NCMNS) 2
Join the Sep. 21-23, 2023 virtual (online) conference that offers possible answers to some of the most puzzling questions in earth science, such as:
Why do we find amino acids on asteroids, and limestone in comets?
What produced the world’s massive volume of sedimentary rock?
Why is the near side of the moon so different from the far side?
Why are there seashells on top of Mt. Everest?
Why is radioactivity associated with continental granites?
The Hydroplate Theory offers a Biblical, yet scientific, scenario for how the global flood of Noah’s day completely rearranged the surface of the globe. It solves many of the problems that plague other tectonic theories. It out-performed NASA in predicting what would be found in comets and asteroids.
Image
Mid-Atlantic Ridge forming
In addition to a dozen presentations by eight speakers, we will also offer a virtual “field trip” to the Grand Canyon to find out how it may have formed.
Yes, you can afford this conference! We only suggest a small donation, which is optional, and left up to you (suggested donation $20, students $10).
For schedule information and registration, visit: HYDROPLATE.ORG