
Why do inverted dendrite clouds seem to form mostly/only over the islands and coastline in this picture?

I would suggest not making this an either/or decision.Mountainous uplifts, compression of the lithosphere, trenching, cracking, folding, tilting and other deformations in the Earth's surface are most likely not due to incremental changes over hypothetical million-year time spans.
Thought it may have been. Is the white not snow then?Osmosis wrote:The Aleutian Islands
Why do inverted dendrite clouds seem to form mostly/only over the islands and coastline in this picture

I totally agree, and have espoused a similar framework in teaching "my own" catastrophic model of earth history.bdw000 wrote:I would suggest not making this an either/or decision.Mountainous uplifts, compression of the lithosphere, trenching, cracking, folding, tilting and other deformations in the Earth's surface are most likely not due to incremental changes over hypothetical million-year time spans.
It has long been my opinion that the debate between catastrophic and uniformitarian views ignore the most likely scenario: that BOTH probably can and do occur. Evidence for one in no way logically rules out the possibility of the other occurring in some other place or time.
Isn't the Atlantic seafloor slowly spreading apart now?
Aren't the Himalaya's slowly rising right now?
Opponents are always quick to jump on careless use of language as if that is your whole argument.
Either / Or.That stuff is snow, following the dendritic altitudinal contours of the mountain peaks/valleys.
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