English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I'm working on a speech about this subject.

2007-03-19 12:08:46 · 36 answers · asked by Tari Amandil 1 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

36 answers

Yes, and he loves you, and he loves me and we are one big family....

2007-03-19 12:13:51 · answer #1 · answered by 10 Point Shoe-In 3 · 1 1

Yes, and science proves it.

(real quick version)

Bible says water above and below. Science proves we use to have ice shield. During ice shield time, earth would of been like a oxygen chamber, under pressure. This would allow things to grow big, live long, etc. Explains size of dino's, age of Moses, etc. Amber and ice core samples back this up for they can test the oxygen and gases in those samples.

Ice shield breaks and Noahs flood comes. Noah saves a few "kinds" of dino's. Flood ends, Noah sets up camp and lets animals go about their biz.

Since no more ice shield, earth is no longer like a oxygen chamber. Now items don't grow as big, live as long, etc.

So what happened to the dino's? They are still around, but just what we would call baby dino's. For 1, reptiles never stop growing in their life. Big difference in living 600 yrs in a oxygen chamber compared to living 50 yrs on earth today. Be like on steroids and not on steroids.

If you look at the bones and fossils of the raptore, then compare them to the running desert lizard, you will realize they are but the exact same animal. Then compare their eggs, once again, same size, same shape, same way in nest, etc.

I love telling people that dino's are still around and some keep them as pets, it just blows their mind.

Lizards, geckos, etc etc on down the line you see today, are the decendants from the few dino's on the Ark.

Now being school, and how they love the "theory of evolution" I am sure the teacher will not accept this answer, even though 100% science can back it up.

And if they say "what about carbon dating", tell them to carbon date a living snail and then ask them, "what about carbon dating?" cause the date will come out to be 27,000 yrs old, even though the snail is moving right in front of you.

2007-03-19 12:19:53 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

there are stories that have came from the Indians of huge soaring bird flying over swamps, and there is even a story of a ship of people, out on the pacific ocean seeing seals attacking a huge whale like monster with large fins and a long neck. They also found that same monster on the beach dead.

were do you think people thought of dragons, its to big of an imagenation for someone to think of dont you think.
dragons where widely known back then

2007-03-19 12:25:00 · answer #3 · answered by landry m 2 · 1 1

None documented.

There are remote regions of the world where an enclave of dinosaurs might have survived, but none has been detected to date. There is no good photographic documentation of a live dinosaur. The "fresh" bones are wishful thinking. Some incredibly well preserved bones have been found, but no living dinosaurs have been found in those areas, and satellite technology is available to seek them.

2007-03-19 12:26:01 · answer #4 · answered by novangelis 7 · 0 2

Yes. There are many prehistoric animals still living in the ocean's waters. Elephants, kimono dragons, alligators, certain sharks and giant tortoises have been around for millions of years without changing/evolving much.

2007-03-19 12:12:20 · answer #5 · answered by ☺SDgurl☺ 3 · 2 1

No. If you have extra time you might want to rethink your topic. It sounds like it would make for an unenlightening one-sided speech.

*edit* Reptiles are NOT dinosaurs!

2007-03-19 12:12:47 · answer #6 · answered by hgherron2 4 · 0 1

Sure. Not too many of them. But there are still large reptiles that have remained relatively unchanged in the last 160 million years. I'm not sure- but were there crocodiles or kimodo dragons around 160M years ago? If so- there are your living dinosaurs.

2007-03-19 12:12:38 · answer #7 · answered by Morey000 7 · 1 2

Nessie might be a pleisiosaur, but no one has caught her.

Birds have the pelvic structure of dinosaurs, and the fact that they're warm-blooded indicates that some dinosaurs were, too.

2007-03-19 12:18:05 · answer #8 · answered by REV. JESSE LEE PETERSON 3 · 1 1

I think Crocodiles are considered to be dinosaurs because they are large reptilian creatures that lived on, but most "dinosaurs" are extinct. Some definitions of the word dinosaur include "extinct animals (of that type from that time)" in the definition.

2007-03-19 12:14:29 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

probly not.

theres a classic book, the title of which temporarily escaping me, where these people go to the center of the earth and find an underground utopia filled with dinosaurs...

its a safe bet to say no, but the dinos under the earth thing would be frickin sweet.

2007-03-19 12:12:05 · answer #10 · answered by squirrelman9014 3 · 0 2

It kinda crossed my mind after watching Jurassic Park, but no I don't think so...they've been studying them for years and years and they can't find any clues of survival. Besides, it is said that it was impossible for them to survive after the asteroid hit the earth...

2007-03-19 12:12:22 · answer #11 · answered by shygal 5 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers