"A researcher on the UK’s Isle of Wight was searching the beach for fossilized bones when he spotted something odd—a “big purple toe” sticking out from where storms had washed away some shingle, exposing the rock underneath. The “toe” was part of a nearly three-foot-wide footprint from an Iguanodon, a dinosaur that could reach lengths of 36 feet.
Now, the fossil guide and paleontologist who found the footprint claims it’s 130 million years old. So they think for over 100 million years that footprint has been sitting, hidden beneath layers of shingle, waiting for a storm to expose it.
Q: And what happens next?
A: Well, the man who discovered it says the footprint will wash away quickly because of erosion from the tides and the weather. In a matter of a few months, the footprint will have vanished.
**Stop and think about that for a moment: the footprint was supposedly left behind by a dinosaur on the move over 100 million years ago—an unfathomable amount of time. And we are to believe that somehow that footprint was buried, survived all the supposed geological activity and the weathering of its rock encasement for over a hundred million years, and then happened to be exposed during our lifetime—only to disappear a few months later.
**Stop and think about that for a moment: the footprint was supposedly left behind by a dinosaur on the move over 100 million years ago—an unfathomable amount of time. And we are to believe that somehow that footprint was buried, survived all the supposed geological activity and the weathering of its rock encasement for over a hundred million years, and then happened to be exposed during our lifetime—only to disappear a few months later.
That story strains credulity!
And, in the evolutionary worldview, it’s happened over and over and over again!"
AIG