1. By "animal stacking", do they mean this?
2. Faceplant, indeed. I really don't get why, if they want to be taken seriously by anyone, Biblical Archaeologists don't actually, say, study archaeology. You can learn that preservation of soft tissues occurs in numerous circumstances just by reading a few children's books.
3. I told you so.
4. I'm very curious about the number of parking spaces being added to the Creation Museum's facilities....
5. On a more personal note, apparently the fabulous 1970's house I grew up in is on the market again.
2. Faceplant, indeed. I really don't get why, if they want to be taken seriously by anyone, Biblical Archaeologists don't actually, say, study archaeology. You can learn that preservation of soft tissues occurs in numerous circumstances just by reading a few children's books.
3. I told you so.
4. I'm very curious about the number of parking spaces being added to the Creation Museum's facilities....
5. On a more personal note, apparently the fabulous 1970's house I grew up in is on the market again.
Labels: animals, archaeology, fundamentalism, Iceland, KC, narcissism
3 Comments:
To be fair, many archaeologists and historians do think that the Noah story references an actual flood. If the article is implying that dinosaurs existed at the same time as humans though... uh oh.
Sure, there might have been a flood, but my problem is the implication that _only_ a giant flood would allow for preservation of soft tissues.
But the same museum _does_ claim that dinosaurs and humans coexisted. Check out more of the photos at the link. Some awesome diagrams of velociraptors hanging out with cavemen.
Dioramas, rather.
Post a Comment
<< Home