Real Science Friday: Frozen Mammoths

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Jefferson

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Real Science Friday: Frozen Mammoths

This is the show from Friday May 7th, 2010.

BEST QUOTES OF THE SHOW:
[Scientists] have found the larvae of the warble fly (which can't possibly live in the arctic) in frozen mammoth intestines.
Atheists say, "Well, these mammoth bones, they're all over the world, they're extinct and it has nothing to do with the flood." Well, God in His wisdom preserved some of these mammoths to be an enigma to regular scientists who want to believe in the evolutionary nonsense. They can't dispute they're there. And there's no explanation for them other than a cataclysm of unimaginable proportions affected this earth at a time to roll the earth [resulting in the area where the mammoths lived being moved] from a temperate environment into the arctic circle and preserved the remnants of mammoths to prove to us that something happened in the past.
The studies have been done that to freeze an animal the size of a mammoth, an elephant, to allow their stomach contents to not be digested - as is the case with these frozen mammoths - the only way that could happen is for the outside temperature to reach 150 degrees below zero or lower. And those temperatures don't occur now on the earth.
There's a tremendous amount of undisturbed rock ice in the arctic circle that the atheists can't explain how it got there but Walt Brown can.

SUMMARY:

* Kevin Lea and Bob Enyart Discuss Woolly Mammoths: In this special edition of Real Science Friday, Kevin Lea, with his background in nuclear physics, talks with Bob about frozen mammoths. (Did you hear their great show on Comets?) Pastor Kevin Lea of Calvary Church, Port Orchard Washington, describes the roll of the Earth which explains why we find remains of millions of mammoths (and horses, rhinos, etc.) in the arctic circle where they could not live because while each animal requires more than a hundred pounds of vegetation per day, the arctic gets almost no sunlight through it's long winter, when its scant vegetation is then completely dormant. Kevin and Bob, using as a guide Dr. Walt Brown's book In the Beginning, talk about the mammoths being buried in rock ice, loess, and muck in the arctic circle. The Bible records that the fountains of the great deep broke forth and flooded the Earth and, as it turns out, water that shot up to space but without escape velocity came back down as supercooled ice at colder than 150 degrees below zero, and froze mammoths so quickly the temperate climate vegetation in their stomachs were preserved! And hear an amazing prediction, that beneath upright mammoths, there is no layered strata, oil, coal seams, or limestone! Why not? Because these mammoths, frozen while still standing, were killed at the very beginning stages of the global flood and all those features are a result of that flood! Check out also Walt Brown's fabulous chapter on Frozen Mammoths!

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Stripe

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Billybob had a pet mammoth, I seem to remember. :think:

:chuckle:
 

Flipper

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[Scientists] have found the larvae of the warble fly (which can't possibly live in the arctic) in frozen mammoth intestines.

Hai u guys, sorry to mar the spotless record for RSF truthiness, but you do realize that there's a species of the warble fly living in the arctic circle today, right? It specializes in parasitizing reindeer.
 
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Vendergood

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Atheists say, "Well, these mammoth bones, they're all over the world, they're extinct and it has nothing to do with the flood." Well, God in His wisdom preserved some of these mammoths to be an enigma to regular scientists who want to believe in the evolutionary nonsense.

:rotfl:

I can't imagine any way you can possibly prove that.
 

gsweet

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Atheists say, "Well, these mammoth bones, they're all over the world, they're extinct and it has nothing to do with the flood." Well, God in His wisdom preserved some of these mammoths to be an enigma to regular scientists who want to believe in the evolutionary nonsense. They can't dispute they're there. And there's no explanation for them other than a cataclysm of unimaginable proportions affected this earth at a time to roll the earth [resulting in the area where the mammoths lived being moved] from a temperate environment into the arctic circle and preserved the remnants of mammoths to prove to us that something happened in the past.



:dizzy:
 

Flipper

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I'm also wondering what a large animal with a poor surface-to-volume heat exchange ratio would want with thick insulating hair in a temperate climate?
 

Chalmer Wren

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The studies have been done that to freeze an animal the size of a mammoth, an elephant, to allow their stomach contents to not be digested - as is the case with these frozen mammoths - the only way that could happen is for the outside temperature to reach 150 degrees below zero or lower. And those temperatures don't occur now on the earth.

Alternatively, killing the animal also stops the process of digestion, especially in the stomach.
 

The Berean

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Kind of off topic but I seem to remember some plan to to try to create a mammoth like animal through the genetic manipulation of modern elephant DNA. And wonder if that project ever got off the ground? :idunno:
 

Delmar

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I really liked the episode of Northern Exposure, where the locals found a mastodon and carved it into steaks.
 

Stripe

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Looks like a few of us are commenting without having listened to the show. :plain:

Berean .. were they designing it to fly?
 

Alate_One

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Welcome to WRONG Science Friday gsweet. :)

Guess Bob missed the *real* science news about mammoths that got released just recently . . . .


By inserting a 43,000-year-old woolly mammoth gene into Escherichia coli bacteria, scientists have figured out how these ancient beasts adapted to the subzero temperatures of prehistoric Siberia and North America.

The gene, which codes for the oxygen-transporting protein hemoglobin, allowed the animals to keep their tissues supplied with oxygen even at very low temperatures. "It's no different from going back 40,000 years and taking a blood sample from a living mammoth," says Kevin Campbell, a biologist at the University of Manitoba in Canada



Source:News from Science magazine

Gee those nuclear physics and engineering backgrounds sure are helpful in biology . . . :chuckle:
 

Stripe

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Welcome to WRONG Science Friday gsweet. :Guess Bob missed the *real* science news about mammoths that got released just recently . . . .OX]By inserting a 43,000-year-old woolly mammoth gene into Escherichia coli bacteria, scientists have figured out how these ancient beasts adapted to the subzero temperatures of prehistoric Siberia and North America. The gene, which codes for the oxygen-transporting protein hemoglobin, allowed the animals to keep their tissues supplied with oxygen even at very low temperatures. "It's no different from going back 40,000 years and taking a blood sample from a living mammoth," says Kevin Campbell, a biologist at the University of Manitoba in Canada[/BOX]Source:[rl=http://news.sciencemag.org/sciencenow/2010/05/scientists-resurrect-mammoth-hem.html]News from Science magazine[/url]Gee those nuclear physics and engineering backgrounds sure are helpful in biology . . . :huckle:
Another non-listener.


You were wondering if it ever got off the ground. :D

:noid:
 

Yorzhik

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I disagree with Walt Brown on this one. Although it doesn't help the evolutionists much because it still means a flood occurred.
 
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