Difference between revisions of "Paraconformity"
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| − | According to [[Ariel R. Roth]] a '''paraconformity''' occurs "when | + | According to [[Ariel R. Roth]] a '''paraconformity''' occurs "when a part of the [[geological column]] is missing in the <nowiki>[sedimentary]</nowiki> layers." <ref>http://www.grisda.org/georpts/36.pdf</ref> |
[[William Corliss|William R.Corliss]], a cataloger and writer on scientific anomalies, wrote the following regarding paraconformities: | [[William Corliss|William R.Corliss]], a cataloger and writer on scientific anomalies, wrote the following regarding paraconformities: | ||
Revision as of 23:25, May 16, 2007
According to Ariel R. Roth a paraconformity occurs "when a part of the geological column is missing in the [sedimentary] layers." [1]
William R.Corliss, a cataloger and writer on scientific anomalies, wrote the following regarding paraconformities:
| “ |
"Potentially more important to geological thinking are those unconformities that signal large chunks of geological history are missing, even though the strata on either side of the unconformity are perfectly parallel and show no evidence of erosion. Did millions of years fly by with no discernible effect? A possible though controversial inference is that our geological clocks and stratigraphic concepts need working on." William R. Corliss, Unknown Earth (Glen Arm, Maryland: The Sourcebook Project, 1980), p. 219. [2] |
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Ariel R. Roth wrote regarding paraconformities the following: "The lack of evidence of time at the surface of the underlying layers of a paraconformity suggest that the long ages never occurred." [3] Young earth creationists see paraconformities as a serious challenge to the old earth uniformitarian geology paradigm. [4][5][6]