(SWGO)DesertEagle wrote:
There is plenty of evidence for creation, it's the same evidence used for evolution in many cases, just interpreted differently. Please don't mischaracterize creationism as a position with no support. There are plenty of reputable scientists who not only believe it but do research in it (check out http://www.icr.org/). For example, there is the hot field of Flood geology. Did you know that you can more easily explain the current composition and condition of the earth via Noah's Flood? That is our explanation of why the earth appears so old: giant flood = jumble up fossils (that's why birds often appear above larger animals, they managed to escape the flood for longer) + leach out radioisotopes.
By the way, large parts of the earth have been determined to have been under water at one time or another, which makes sense.
Now here are some problems for an old earth, which evolution requires: explain how you can have carbon-14 in a several million year old diamond? Also, explain how rocks from the recent Mt. St. Helens eruption date to several million years old? The answer the scientific community gives is that the methods were incorrectly applied, except for the small problem that the analysis was performed by an independant lab that didn't know the motive behind the research. Interesting how it magically must be invalid because it contradicts current opinion.
Oh, here's the kicker: explain polystrate fossils (i.e. trees that were fossilized and extend thru layers of strata dating millions of years apart).
It's not an old earth, it's flawed assumptions.
1) Every example you are citing is misleadingly being construed as evidence. Many major theologies cite examples of a Great Flood - having studied sociology, we can deduce that regional floods that are especially catastrophic, those that destroy crops, cause social upheaval, etc. are the source for stories like this.
You also happen to be ignoring all other problems with a literal interpretation of Noah's Flood, (many of which are listed here). You claim that the fossils we have found were "jumbled by the flood." Please explain what you mean by this because I feel you're conveniently ignoring fatal flaws within each argument and selectively picking portions of them to try and support Creationism. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8IPGwAf0Ivw
Yes, large parts of the Earth have been determined to have been under water at some point...but there's no evidence to suggest that the Earth was submerged in water at any given time. In fact, records of human development in the Americas show uninterrupted growth up until the time the Mayas disappeared...and at this time (simultaneously), the Teotihuacan, the Olmecs, other civs still lived and thrived, in fact, the Niger Valley People of W Africa still lived. There is no evidence to suggest that all humans, except for Noah and his family, were wiped off the planet Earth...there is too much genetic diversity for that to be the case.
2) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hKGMqCqWpNc The Earth is most certainly not young.
3) Here is an article that explains "polystrate fossils" http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/polystrate/trees.html
EDIT: Here is something interesting I stumbled across; it sheds light on what you had mentioned earlier, the generation of new genetic information: http://www.nature.com/scitable/topicpage/origins-of-new-genes-and-pseudogenes-835
And Sketchup, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XdddbYILel0&feature=player_detailpage#t=520, I've lifted a portion of a very well-presented video to address your concerns. Please feel free to watch the whole thing should you so choose.