Does Planet Earth look
round or flat to you?...from the first ever colour photograph taken from outer
space.
The Jewish prophet Isaiah
wrote in about 700 BC:
"It is he that sitteth upon the circle of
the earth..." Isaiah 40:22
…and that’s centuries before Aristotle claimed the
Earth was spherical.
By the way, that’s just
a colour chart below Earth which hangs on nothing in space, just as Job said
about 3,500 years ago:
“He…hangeth the earth upon nothing.” Job 26:7Okay then, what about Earth’s continents?
In 1912, German meteorologist Alfred Lothar Wegener proposed the theory of slow ‘Continental Drift’ from one super-continent now known as Pangaea (‘all lands’), comprising Laurasia in the north and Gondwanaland in the south.
Earlier, in 1859 French-American geographer Antonio
Snider-Pellegrini proposed “rapid, horizontal divergence” at the time of the
Great Flood.
Thesaurus Geographicus |
“And God said, Let the waters under the heavens
be gathered together unto one place, and let the dry land appear: and it was
so. And God called the dry land Earth; and the gathering together of the waters
He called Seas: and God saw that it was good.” Genesis 1:9-10
No arguments there, but were today’s continents torn apart or have they been drifting apart
over millions of years? Who was right?
Why not check with eye-witness
account?
”For in [Peleg’s] days was the earth divided…” Genesis 10:25 (Peleg lived 239 years)
Based on eye-witness report, it takes only half a
dozen words to describe the parting of the continents only ~4,000 years ago!
What do you know!...plate tectonics in the Bible
- long before the science of ‘geology’ existed. Fantastic? Of course!
NEXT: World's 1st Met Report
Click on: http://hotspuds.blogspot.com.au/2015/02/worlds-1st-met-report.html
Click on: http://hotspuds.blogspot.com.au/2015/02/worlds-1st-met-report.html
Acknowledgements:
scienceblogs.com
geologyfreak.wordpress
en.wikipedia.org
pubs.usgs.gov
ortelius.com
Image credits:
commons.wikimedia.org
antiqua-global.art.com
scienceblogs.com
geologyfreak.wordpress
en.wikipedia.org
pubs.usgs.gov
ortelius.com
Image credits:
commons.wikimedia.org
antiqua-global.art.com
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