WHY SIX ARCHAEOPTERYX FOSSILS IN THE SAME AREA?
The immense mudflow that occurred two years after the Mount St. Helens eruption eroded a channel into solid bedrock, up to 140 feet deep, within a few hours, producing a canyon system one fortieth the size of Grand Canyon. Dr. Steve Austin dubbed it the Little Grand Canyon, and even the rangers there and some evolutionary geologists have adopted the name. The material from that mudflow went into the Columbia River choking it, and the river had to be dredged to allow shipping to resume. That flow was very powerful, yet it is very tiny compared to the magnitudes of the flows that would have been part of a global flood. These flows would not mix with one another (In next month Crossfire, a friend working on his geology masters degree and I explain why), causing mixing of marine and terrestrial organisms, contrary to the claims made by opponents of a global flood. By and large, they would remain segregated. This segregation has lead evolutionists to suppose that the geological strata repre