Wednesday, 29 July 2020

Mount Saint Helens Erupted

Image courtesy of Lyn Topinka, popular image.





Joel Kontinen

 

In May 1980 The Mount St. Helens eruption indicated that thick sediment layers could form in almost no time. A single lava flow in June 1980 formed over 7.5 metres (25 feet) of sediment in just three hours. What is more, the layers look like they are millions of years old.

In addition, mud slides formed a huge canyon very rapidly. The Toutle River Canyon looks as if it is millions of years old, but its real age is 30 years.

The eruption of Mount St. Helens reminds us what the Genesis Flood could do. Mount St. Helens eruption indicated that thick sediment layers could form in almost no time. A single lava flow in June 1980 formed over 7.5 metres (25 feet) of sediment in just three hours. What is more, the layers look like they are millions of years old.


In addition, mud slides formed a huge canyon very rapidly. The Toutle River Canyon looks as if it is millions of years old, but its real age is 30 years.

The eruption of Mount St. Helens reminds us what the Genesis Flood could do. Mount St. Helens erupted, showing that major geological features can be produced in almost an instant instead of needing millions of years.

The Mount St. Helens eruption indicated that thick sediment layers could form in almost no time. A single lava flow in June 1980 formed over 7.5 metres (25 feet) of sediment in just three hours. What is more, the layers look like they are millions of years old.

In addition, mud slides formed a huge canyon very rapidly. The Toutle River Canyon looks as if it is millions of years old but its real age is 30 years.

The eruption of Mount St. Helens reminds us what the Genesis Flood could do.

A new DVD 
shows what happened. Here’s its promo, courtesy of Creation Ministries International: