The Flood Geology Series
The Great Missoula Flood: Modern Day Evidence for the Worldwide Flood Pt3
Season 1, Episode 8
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28m
In the 1920’s J. Harland Bretz, a secular geologist proposed a massive flood across eastern Washington. He was rejected by his colleagues because the flood seemed too “biblical”. He was shunned, for forty years, until satellite images proved him right. Scientist Michael Oard explores the Missoula Flood, demonstrating how the geologic features are a small scale example of the Genesis Flood. Michael Oard will take you on a tour of the ancient shorelines, lake sediments, glacial moraines, over-deepened lakes, gravel bars, channeled scablands, coulees, giant dry falls, silt hills, giant ripple marks, catastrophically cut basalt canyons, sediment rhythmites, and glacial erratics. He’ll present strong evidence there was only one Missoula Flood, caused by the single Ice Age, after the Global Flood, all happening just a few thousand years ago. Michael J. Oard will then apply the effects of the Missoula Flood to how the Global Flood impacted our earth.
Up Next in The Flood Geology Series
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Receding Floodwaters Pt1
Researcher and scientists Michael J. Oard uses his knowledge of the Ice Age and Missoula Flood to lay out his case for a Global Flood. He shares how many geologic features on the surface of the earth just can’t be explained through slow and gradual processes, but rather, one worldwide Flood. Th...
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Receding Floodwaters Pt2
Researcher and scientists Michael J. Oard uses his knowledge of the Ice Age and Missoula Flood to lay out his case for a Global Flood. He shares how many geologic features on the surface of the earth just can’t be explained through slow and gradual processes, but rather, one worldwide Flood. Th...
-
Receding Floodwaters Pt3
Researcher and scientists Michael J. Oard uses his knowledge of the Ice Age and Missoula Flood to lay out his case for a Global Flood. He shares how many geologic features on the surface of the earth just can’t be explained through slow and gradual processes, but rather, one worldwide Flood. Th...