• last year
In this fascinating sequel to "Is Genesis History?", watch a team of scientists discover new evidence for the global Flo | dG1fSXB4ZE1UYWJhREE
Transcript
00:00 (gentle music)
00:02 - This is Lee's Ferry.
00:18 I've been here many times.
00:20 It's where we always load the boats
00:21 when we start our Grand Canyon trips.
00:23 This is my friend, Tom Vail.
00:28 He started Canyon Ministries and took me
00:30 on my very first trip down the canyon.
00:33 No one knows the canyon better than Tom,
00:36 and I was fortunate to have him as my guide
00:39 on all the canyon trips I've taken.
00:41 This is Dr. Andrew Snelly,
00:45 and sitting next to him is Dr. John Whitmore.
00:48 Both are geologists.
00:49 You may recall Andrew from our last film,
00:53 His Genesis History.
00:55 Remember, Andrew took me to an extinct volcano in Arizona
00:59 to discuss radioisotope dating and the age of the Earth.
01:02 John was Andrew's assistant on this trip.
01:06 He's been a geology professor
01:09 at Cedarville University for over 30 years.
01:12 He's also spent a lot of time
01:16 studying the Coconino Sandstone layer in the Grand Canyon.
01:19 The conventional paradigm says the Coconino Sandstone
01:24 was formed over millions of years in a desert by the wind.
01:28 But John's research has clearly shown
01:33 that it was formed rapidly underwater during the flood.
01:36 This is a key piece of evidence for the creation model.
01:41 Little did I know that the same year
01:45 we released His Genesis History in theaters,
01:48 Andrew was embarking on a research project
01:50 down in the canyon.
01:53 He was looking for new evidence
01:54 that many of the enormous layers of sediment
01:57 we see all around the world were laid down during the flood.
02:01 One of the things that has always fascinated
02:05 creation scientists are the huge folds
02:08 that can be seen in the canyon and all over the world.
02:11 Andrew had a theory he wanted to test.
02:16 If his theory was correct,
02:18 it would be important new evidence regarding Earth history
02:21 and the geological timetable.
02:23 These two scientists have spent much of their lives
02:29 finding evidence that supports the history of Genesis.
02:33 But in all those instances, their work was never filmed.
02:37 This time was different.
02:38 They took a cameraman with them into the canyon
02:41 to capture what they were doing.
02:42 When I heard about it,
02:45 I realized that this was a way to show something
02:47 most people have never seen.
02:50 Creation scientists doing the actual work of science.
02:54 How do scientists connect the history in Genesis
02:58 with the world around us?
02:59 How do they test their theories?
03:04 And what did the flood do to create the world
03:07 we live in today?
03:08 Our first documentary provided an overview
03:13 of creation science.
03:14 But in this documentary,
03:17 we're going to explore how creation science
03:19 actually works.
03:21 Because it is important that you see for yourself
03:24 how scientists do science.
03:26 I'm Del Taket.
03:30 I'm excited to be your guide
03:31 as we explore the rise of mountains after the flood.
03:35 (dramatic music)

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