How did dinosaurs get under ground?

Billy Beer

kiwifarms.net
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Apr 23, 2021
Some of them are burried well deep down there. How did it happen?

What about TimeTeam digging up viking villages in Cumbria? They're 10ft deep and are only 1000 years old. How did 1000yr old shit get 10ft under ground?
 
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The viking villages were just simple sedimentary deposition. Deposition rates vary with time and location.
The dinosaurs were buried in a global flood about 4000 years ago.
It is all a lie to make the oil seem more scarce. How else would you reckon that it is never running out despite all the projection science made?
 
There is no such thing as dinosaur bones.

Due to their extreme age they go through mineralization and are actually, stone. This process takes millions of years, but according to Christians who have assisted in recording Egyptian Mummies that are about 4,000 years old, this means that When the Dinosaurs were wiped out 5,000 years ago that the mineralization process took only 1,000 years to take place, because the mummies had real bones in them and not stone bones.
 
What looks like dinosaur bones are just rocks that coincidentally look like giant bones, skulls, and teeth.

There never were any such things as dinosaurs, and fossilization is a commonly believed science myth. We know for sure that mammoths and maybe a couple of other ice age animals existed because they were found frozen in ice. There are also some mummified remains of extinct animals from caves here and there around the world, but these are the only exceptions. Otherwise, there's just no way we can tell what sort of life existed before we did.
 
Then why aren't castles from 1100 Ad, partly buried in sediment?
It depends on local deposition rates. If you're on high ground, as many castle are for obvious reasons, you'll get no deposition at all. What you'd be worried about there is erosion depositing chunks of the hillside elsewhere.
 
It depends on local deposition rates. If you're on high ground, as many castle are for obvious reasons, you'll get no deposition at all. What you'd be worried about there is erosion depositing chunks of the hillside elsewhere.
You seem to know your shit, where does this deposition come from? I rarely see soil falling from the sky.
 
Stuff like this but slower and all the time:
I just can't visualise that happening all over, consistently enough to burry shit 6ft deep in a few hundred years.

The dinosaurs I can swallow because that was ages ago. Needing an excavation crew to go have a mooch about vikingworld, while you can mince around 10th century bars and buildings, just doesn't add up

Not to say that what you're saying is wrong, just that I can't picture it.
 
Then why aren't castles from 1100 Ad, partly buried in sediment?
Mainly because there hasn't been another global, cataclysmic flood.
But localised flooding and deposition take place all the time. London and Boston are excellent example of cities built on top of themselves, due to flooding. Many modern cities were originally at a much lower level than they are at present.
Another cause is seismic activity and volcanic eruptions. Mt. St. Helens is a fascinating case study.

There is no such thing as dinosaur bones.
Incorrect. Bones have been discovered that still have tissue and blood vessels intact. This has caused great amounts of circular reasoning on the part of evolutionists.
 
Mainly because there hasn't been another global, cataclysmic flood.
But localised flooding and deposition take place all the time. London and Boston are excellent example of cities built on top of themselves, due to flooding. Many modern cities were originally at a much lower level than they are at present.


Incorrect. Bones have been discovered that still have tissue and blood vessels intact. This has caused great amounts of circular reasoning on the part of evolutionists.
yes yes yes. but in 99% of cases...
 
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I just can't visualise that happening all over, consistently enough to burry shit 6ft deep in a few hundred years.

The dinosaurs I can swallow because that was ages ago. Needing an excavation crew to go have a mooch about vikingworld, while you can mince around 10th century bars and buildings, just doesn't add up

Not to say that what you're saying is wrong, just that I can't picture it.
Going by the numbers you cited, 10 feet in 1000 years is 1 foot of deposition in 100 or barely over an inch in 10 years. That's really not very noteworthy levels of sediment. I've lived places with much higher levels than that. Take note of how much mud gets moved around wherever you live next time you get a nasty rain storm.
 
The dragger of penises brings up good points and I would like to add to them. Believe it or not the soil under your feet is fluid. There is a reason that metal detectorists have to dig for their quarry. Metal is heavier than dirt and so it ever so slowly sinks. There is also sedimentation, but that can't account for a 20 year old penny being like two inches or more into the dirt. As you sit here reading this your house is actually slowly sinking into the ground. That's why I had to replace my chimney this year, but that is a whole other story. I'm pretty much in the middle of a tectonic plate, but in earthquake prone areas the ground can become really liquid really fast. Multiply that penny by a few million years and factor in some earthquakes and it becomes a wonder that we can find anything. This area was a sea at one point so you can find deposits of millions of year old sea shells that were once huge reefs on the surface some times. Someone even found a megalodon jaw in a river decades ago. Geography is complicated and there is a reason that there is a whole science devoted to it.
 
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