Okay so Peleg stays.

You mentioned the end of the ice age, which brings up a few questions: a) was there an ice age? and b) what caused it to end? and c) how fast did it end?
* As I said earlier, the Saturn model has the oceans mostly in the polar column above the north pole until the Saturn age ended, which is what brought the Great Flood. The flood came from the polar column, when it was severed from Saturn. The flood also filled the ocean basins.What I don't get, and I may have missed it or it may just be me, is what the oceans are doing while all this shocking dynamism is going on.
* As I said earlier, the continents did not behave like fluids. Only the bottoms of the continents became fluid and areas of mountain building became somewhat fluid. The continents behaved like slabs of ice which slid on an ice-like surface.If, as this guy says, the landmasses are behaving like fluids and moving across the planet (in 26hrs) then surely the ocean(s) will be doing it more so?
* It's only in areas of mountain building that rock became doughy or fluid. The dinosaurs were killed by the "impact" shock and by the vulcanism, flooding etc.I'm thinking tserious tsunamis here. I'm also thinking that any previously fresh water sources would be seriously contaminated from gasses and other stuff released during the fluid phase. This, I think, would also apply to any newly formed lakes, rivers, etc. This would have a devastating effect on any flora and fauna which had managed to survive the fluid phase. If the ground turned to the consistency of dough then what would happen to a multi-ton dinosaur?
* They may have caused some small-scale sliding.Aquatic flora and fauna would also presumably suffer from the oceans being contaminated with silt from the land and a general stirring up from runaway landmasses? Plus current and temperature changes? ... On a related note, what about other impact sites such as Chicxulub(?), would they cause the fluid dynamism effect albeit on a smaller scale?
* The ice age began right after the Great Flood, possibly due to extensive vulcanism and perhaps to orbital changes. The ice age has been decreasing since it began.You mentioned the end of the ice age, which brings up a few questions: a) was there an ice age? and b) what caused it to end? and c) how fast did it end?
* I agree that the paradise conditions of former times won't likely return naturally, but I think it's entirely possible to restore them technologically. I've also thought about moving an icy asteroid to Venus to cool it off and supply water. It should be a great place to grow forests, although the atmosphere is probably too heavy. We'd probably have to siphon off a lot of the atmosphere. I've suggested that we should take it to Mars, which has too little. I think it would be great to make as many of the planets and moons as possible habitable.Once the destabilizing global catastrophe and its attending global winter were over, the earth slowly returned/is returning to its former warmer state. It will never reach that state, however, if my view is correct that the former "greenhhouse" climate structures [eg. smoother topography, more vaporous atmosphere, undivided continents, etc.] are no longer in place.
* Do you have any evidence to back that up? This TPOD considers the pluton from magma theory unsound.at the core of most ranges are found large plutons which definitely have been pushed up from beneath
* You said:Another example of an anomalous, mountain-sized uplift is Stone Mountain, Georgia [http://www.gatewaysportaviation.com/ima ... ainsml.jpg]. Once again, the standard explanation sees Stone Mountain as the remains of a granitic magma intrusion into softer limestone sediments that subsequently wore away, uncovering the dome-shaped pluton after millions of years.
"Overlying rock strata" is a theory similar to "dark matter". It was invented so that the theory would work and not because of observational data. Long eons of geologic time and the slow course of wind and water picking single grains off the face of a granite colossus until it resembles Half Dome [http://www.sagarmatha.com/images/halfdome.jpg] is a theory whose time has passed. Ice has never been demonstrated to break and crush mountains into spires and mounds. Wind and rain dash themselves against the formations like bugs on a windshield, but that doesn't mean weather or insects created the shapes. Instead of eroding down, they could have been electrically pinched up.
* There were no deep oceans, just shallow lakes or seas etc. Climate was warm on all of Saturn's planets, including Earth, from pole to pole. Mammals that have sparse hair, like humans, elephants, hippos, rhinos [?], swine, etc probably lived a lot in water.I don't follow your "no pre-flood oceans" stance... what kind of scenario do you visualize for life on earth pre-flood?
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