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Out-of-Place Fossils 2
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In Uzbekistan, 86 consecutive hoofprints of horses were found in rocks dating back to the dinosaurs (b). Hoofprints of some other animal are alongside 1,000 dinosaur footprints in Virginia (c). A leading authority on the Grand Canyon published photographs of horselike hoofprints visible in rocks that, according to the theory of evolution, predate hoofed animals by more than 100 million years (d). Dinosaur and humanlike footprints were found together in Turkmenistan (e) and Arizona (f).

b. Y. Kruzhilin and V. Ovcharov, ??A Horse from the Dinosaur Epoch?? Moskovskaya Pravda [Moscow Truth], 5 February 1984.

c. Richard Monastersky, ??A Walk along the Lakeshore, Dinosaur-Style,? Science News, Vol. 136, 8 July 1989, p. 21.

d. Edwin D. McKee, The Supai Group of Grand Canyon, Geological Survey Professional Paper 1173 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1982), pp. 93??96, 100.

e. Alexander Romashko, ??Tracking Dinosaurs,? Moscow News, No. 24, 1983, p. 10. [For an alternate but equivalent translation published by an anti-creationist organization, see Frank Zindler, ??Man??A Contemporary of the Dinosaurs?? Creation/Evolution, Vol. 6, No. 1, 1986, pp. 28??29.]

f. Paul O. Rosnau et al., ??Are Human and Mammal Tracks Found Together with the Tracks of Dinosaurs in the Kayenta of Arizona?? Parts I and II, Creation Research Society Quarterly, Vol. 26, September 1989, pp. 41??48 and December 1989, pp. 77??98.

Jeremy Auldaney et al., ??More Human-Like Track Impressions Found with the Tracks of Dinosaurs in the Kayenta Formation at Tuba City Arizona,? Creation Research Society Quarterly, Vol. 34, December 1997, pp. 133??146 and back cover.

In the Beginning: Compelling Evidence for Creation and the Flood - 25. Out-of-Place Fossils
Pahu78 Reviewed by Pahu78 on . Science Disproves Evolution Compatible Senders and Receivers Only intelligence creates codes, programs, and information (CP&I). Each involves senders and receivers. Senders and receivers can be people, animals, plants, organs, cells, or certain molecules. (The DNA molecule is a prolific sender.) The CP&I in a message must be understandable and beneficial to both sender and receiver; otherwise, the effort expended in transmitting and receiving messages (written, chemical, electrical, magnetic, visual, and auditory) will Rating: 5