...the same day were all the fountains of the great deep broken up, and the windows of heaven were opened.
Genesis 7:11
"There are three main schools of thought in creationist circles on the location of the Flood/post-Flood boundary within the geological column.
The first believes that the Flood/post-Flood boundary is generally in the late Paleozoic.
However, Robinson has recently moved the boundary from just below the Permian into the Precambrian.
Lowering the boundary within the geological column is a predictable progression since some of the criteria used to define a post-Flood environment in this school of thought, such as hardgrounds, are also found in the early Paleozoic.
The second school of thought believes the Flood/post-Flood boundary is near the Cretaceous/Tertiary (K/T) boundary.
Most, if not all, the Cenozoic strata would be post-Flood. Such a belief has spawned other creationist hypotheses, such as the dam-breach hypothesis for the origin of the Grand Canyon.
The Grand Canyon formed in ‘late Cenozoic’ time according to the uniformitarian geological column, and therefore must have been carved in post-Flood time, according to this school of thought.
Great tectonic uplift occurred during the Cenozoic; consequently, this school of thought automatically postulates that most mountain ranges arose in the post-Flood period without providing evidence. An example is the Sierra Nevada Mountains in California, USA.
The third school of thought believes the Flood/post-Flood boundary is near the end of the Cenozoic.
In practice, this school of thought believes that practically all the lithified sedimentary rocks are from the Flood, and the boundary is near, or at the surface of these rocks." CMI
Genesis 7:11
"There are three main schools of thought in creationist circles on the location of the Flood/post-Flood boundary within the geological column.
The first believes that the Flood/post-Flood boundary is generally in the late Paleozoic.
However, Robinson has recently moved the boundary from just below the Permian into the Precambrian.
Lowering the boundary within the geological column is a predictable progression since some of the criteria used to define a post-Flood environment in this school of thought, such as hardgrounds, are also found in the early Paleozoic.
The second school of thought believes the Flood/post-Flood boundary is near the Cretaceous/Tertiary (K/T) boundary.
Most, if not all, the Cenozoic strata would be post-Flood. Such a belief has spawned other creationist hypotheses, such as the dam-breach hypothesis for the origin of the Grand Canyon.
The Grand Canyon formed in ‘late Cenozoic’ time according to the uniformitarian geological column, and therefore must have been carved in post-Flood time, according to this school of thought.
Great tectonic uplift occurred during the Cenozoic; consequently, this school of thought automatically postulates that most mountain ranges arose in the post-Flood period without providing evidence. An example is the Sierra Nevada Mountains in California, USA.
The third school of thought believes the Flood/post-Flood boundary is near the end of the Cenozoic.
In practice, this school of thought believes that practically all the lithified sedimentary rocks are from the Flood, and the boundary is near, or at the surface of these rocks." CMI