otseng
If SG is so scientific, it should be able to make a prediction on what stratas should look like.
That's the point, the SG can make predictions GIVEN THE HISTORY AND FORCES INVOLVED IN THE SPECIFIC AREA IN QUESTION. It is not being scientific to try to construct useless strawmen to win an argument. I can predict that if an area is in a fault zone, there will be discontinuous layers. I can predict that if the area has always been covered in water and not subject to faulting or folding the layers will be distinct and successive. If an area is or has been subjected to folding, uplift and erosion then we get the jumble we see in the Appilachian mountains. If it first spent millions of years in a shallow midcontinental sea, then was uplifted during the same period a large fast flowing river cut meandering channels into it, you will get something like the Grand Canyon. If there was a rift where two continental plates were seperating you will get a rift valley like in Africa. If an island sits on top of a rift where two continents are drifting apart you get unique formations as seen in Iceland. And if you have an area that has seen all of these forces over time you will get whatever you get, there is no prediction you can make beforehand that will tell you squat, that's why you have to go see, study and determine the history and forces involved.
This world is far more varied and complex than the simplistic tales of the Bible can describe. It is far older and has had a much greater span of histories than man can even comprehend. Dinosaurs were on this Earth for over 100 million years, 25 times as long as men have been here so far(if you count Austrailopithicus as men)If the entire history of the Earth were one year, man and his entire history(from ook, ook to Aha!) would be contained in the last ten seconds of New Years Eve. That cannot be described in any relivant detail in one book written long ago by scientific illiterates.
Let me break the options down. Either SG can or cannot make a prediction on what stratas should look like. There is no other alternative to this. And if SG can make a prediction, then that prediction needs to be presented. If it cannot make a prediction, then I'll accept that.
So sorry, you don't get to dictate what is and what is not scientifically possible. I don't think you understand the process. You are here presenting a false dichotomy, it's just not that simple. Scientists are often criticized for qualifying their answers with statements like "Under these conditions..." or" If this...then that..." or "Given the particulars of this case..." or "This is true if...". But they do this because they know there is no Black and White, This or That answers in the real world. What you are insisting on is not possible, as I have been straining myself telling you. Your picture of predictions is not a scientific one.
As I have patiently explained over and over, science can give very good predictions IF you first determine the history and forces involved in the specific area. Then we will know which of the many models neccessary to describe a complex world we will need to use on that specific area. There is no universal model that can tell us anything useful about all areas. To ask repeatedly for what does not exist is to show how little you understand the subject.
Am I getting through???
We are talking about providing a prediction for SG here, not the FM.
No, we're not, only you are. The OP asked for what predictions the FM makes
Questions for Debate:
1) Does a Global Flood Model provide the best explanation for our current fossil record, geologic formations, and biodiversity?
2) What real science is used in Global Flood Models?
3) What predictions does a Global Flood Model make?
4) Have Global Flood Models ever been subjected to a formal peer review process?
I see nothing in the OP asking for a model or prediction for the SG, quite the opposite. Shall we stop trying to set up strawmen and get back to the topic of the thread now???
Grumpy
