james bond
Gold Member
- Oct 17, 2015
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Do you have another hypothesis for the global layer of iridium associated with the demise of the dinos?It is known that the vast majority of species that lived on this rock are now extinct. If an asteroid had not exterminated the dinos it is likely that man would not exist.
This is really embarrassing. The atheist scientists are still arguing whether it was large asteroid, comet, or a supervolcano in India (Deccan Traps) that killed the dinosaurs. Chicxulub may not have been a large asteroid as the evidence for it isn't convincing. The atheist scientists just accepted this theory because it fits with something from the skies to kill the dinosaurs and not the global flood. Even today, the large asteroid hit is to wipe out human civilization and cause the end of the world, but enough evidence just isn't there.
You are wrong again. There is no global layer of iridium. This is why the supervolcano theory is has more backers with atheist scientists imho.
"The biggest problem is what is missing. Iridium, a chemical element more abundant in meteorites than on Earth, is a primary marker of an impact event. A few traces were identified in the cores of two drilled wells, but no significant amounts have been found in any of the ejecta material across the Chicxulub site.6 The presence of an iridium-rich layer is often used to identify the K-Pg (Cretaceous-Paleogene) boundary, yet ironically there is virtually no iridium in the ejecta material at the very site claimed to be the “smoking gun”!"
![www.icr.org](https://www.icr.org/i/articles/af/chicxulub_theory_wide.jpg)
Chicxulub Crater Theory Mostly Smoke
In secular literature and movies, the most popular explanation for the dinosaurs’ extinction is an asteroid impact. The Chicxulub crater in Mexico is often referred to as the “smoking gun” for this idea. But do the data support an asteroid impact at Chicxulub? I recently reviewed the evidence...