Wednesday, May 3, 2017

Was Earth Created in a Flash?

Not only do we find carbon in impossible places, we find oceans of water deep below the surface of our planet, and the question arises as to how this got down there in the first place. How could something as light as water and carbon squeeze its way down into massive rock? Isn't the Earth supposed to be made up of increasingly dense stuff as we go deeper?

Conventional theories don't make a lot of sense. They go against logic and have a tendency to contradict themselves. We are for instance told that our planet was for millions of years a molten blob of lava. Yet entire oceans of water managed to get trapped inside of this. The water did not float up to the surface and evaporate.

Would it not make more sense to suppose that Earth was created very quickly? We know that very rapid things do happen in the cosmos. Why not suppose that our planet was formed in such a way?

My favorite theory when it comes to the formation of stars and planets is that this happens in supernovas. Contrary to scientific dogma, supernovas are not dying stars, but the birth of solar systems. Supernovas are electrical events. They are thunderbolts of cosmic dimensions, pulling together matter to form stars planets and moons.

The event is so quick that all sorts of matter is pulled together without much chance of separating or evaporating. Because the event is electrical, the surface of planets and moons get roasted to the point of becoming molten rock, while the interior remains cold. The net result are planets with all sorts of matter locked inside of them, including water and carbon.

MyCn18-crop.png

By NASA, R. Sahai, J. Trauger (JPL), and The WFPC2 Science Team - http://www.spacetelescope.org/images/opo9607a/, Public Domain, Link

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