LittleNipper wrote:
You only date fossils by the strata they are found in and the strata by the fossils found in it.
And of course the strata wasn't all laid down at the same time. It happened during various stages of the Pre-Food, the Flood, and Post Flood. Asteroids hit the earth and there is strata formed. The crust of the earth is fractured (forming strata) and volcanic action occurs and that cause ash (forming strata) and lava flows (forming strata). More meteors hit the earth. And then there was the deluge causing mudslides (forming strata), and tsunamis (forming strata). And then the earths crust begins to slide and subside and uplift (forming strata), forming the continents and mountain ranges...
Nipper,
This sounds like an explanation of strata but is it really?
I do not understand how asteroids create very much strata. They blow big holes in the earth erasing strata. The mix blown up in the are would make a layer but all of the asteroids hitting the earth that year would form one scattered layer of mixed rock and dust. Again the crust of the earth fracturing would not create strata it would make breaks in strata. I can see how very large volcanic eruptions make a layer identifiable as volcanic ash, lava pumice etc. Those do exist here and there. The rest mudslides and the crust sliding around would do very little to make layers but would do a good deal to erase them.
The fossil layers is another puzzle, It is not true that fossils are the only dating method but because certain kinds of fossils are found in some layers and not in others they are a method of grouping different examples. I do not see how your proposed pattern of creation of layers would do a clear sorting out of kinds of fossils for different layers. Just the opposite, you propose a story where fossils would all get jumbled together. Earth covered with water the rock being broken up and sloshed about like cement in a cement mixer would result in a mush everywhere.