"According to a press release from University of Colorado, remnants of pine needles, bark and grass have been pulled up in an ice core from two miles under the Greenland ice sheet, between the bottom of the ice sheet and bedrock. This is the first time plant material has been found under the Greenland ice, the report says.
But: how did pine trees grow in a place now seen as one of the biggest deep freezers on Earth?
How did the remains survive decay if the climate change was not extremely rapid?
This is one of many indicators of a past temperate climate in northern latitudes that changed suddenly; remember the redwoods under the Arctic?" CEH
For yet seven days, and I will cause it to rain upon the earth forty days and forty nights; and every living substance that I have made will I destroy from off the face of the earth.
Genesis 7:4
The suspected plant material under about 10,400 feet of ice indicates the Greenland Ice Sheet “formed very fast,” said NGRIP project leader Dorthe Dahl-Jensen, a professor at the University of Copenhagen’s Niels Bohr Institute. “There is a big possibility that this material is several million years old — from a time when trees covered Greenland,” she said.The plant remains held in the researcher’s fingers are the scientific facts. The deduction that trees covered Greenland sometime in the past is logical. The millions-of-years scenario is storytelling.
But: how did pine trees grow in a place now seen as one of the biggest deep freezers on Earth?
How did the remains survive decay if the climate change was not extremely rapid?
This is one of many indicators of a past temperate climate in northern latitudes that changed suddenly; remember the redwoods under the Arctic?" CEH
For yet seven days, and I will cause it to rain upon the earth forty days and forty nights; and every living substance that I have made will I destroy from off the face of the earth.
Genesis 7:4