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GUEST ARTICLE
The Record Buried
in Coal
Buried
within the bosom of the earth are billions of tons of “bottled
sunshine” — more commonly known as coal. How did this material
come to be there? And how much time was involved in its
deposition?
There
are two general theories regarding the formation of coal.
First,
there is the uniformitarian view, which asserts
that coal is the result of “the slow accumulation, through
long ages, of the leaves, seeds, stems, and trunks of this
vegetation, now hardened and pressed down into a fraction
of its original bulk by the pressure of rocks above.”
It
is alleged that in vast swampy areas, “this process was
often repeated again and again, through immense periods
of time” (see: Richards, 3:28). This is the theory favored
by most evolutionists.
Accordingly,
the assumption that the earth’s coal deposits required
millions of years to accumulate is advanced {commonly as
proof that the earth also is very ancient — billions of
years old (estimates fluctuate between 8 and 20 billion
years — not very precise, one must conclude). The claim
is made, therefore, that the Bible, which contains numerous
indications that both the earth and mankind are relatively young,
must be inaccurate — or else the record of scripture is
simply a “poetic” account.
There
is, however, another view of how and when coal was formed.
It may be designated the cataclysmic view, which
associates the formation of earth’s coal beds with the
great flood of Genesis 6-8. The cataclysmic concept contends
that the Noahic deluge accounts for the transportation,
and sudden burial of, vast amounts of vegetation that constitute
the various coal seams found in the earth today.
Interestingly,
when Peter affirmed that the world of Noah’s day “overflowed” with
water (2 Peter 3:6), he used the Greek term katakluzo, from which derives our word “cataclysm.” The
word is composed of kata, “down” and kluzo, “to wash.” This view argues
as follows:
The
vegetation that produced the coal beds was swept by the
waters of the Deluge into recesses or quiet bays, and there
covered by currents that washed mud, sand, or calcareous
material in over it from perhaps the opposite direction.
The great number of successive seams of coal one above
another, alternating with the same kind of sandstone, shale,
or limestone, as the case may be, show that there must
have been an alternation of currents, such as would be
produced by successive tides, with their ebbs and
floods (Price, 214).
The
pressure of tons of earth and rock upon the buried vegetal
material produced the massive coal beds in a relative short
period of time. For an excellent discussion regarding the
origin of coal, from a creationist perspective, see Nevins,
i-iv.
The
question is, therefore, which of these two views best conforms
to the available data?
First
of all, those who believe in the divine origin of the Bible
will give its testimony foremost consideration. God’s written
revelation, if it touches upon a subject, will, from
the very nature of the case, be superior to speculative
interpretations of the geological record. And the fact
of the matter is, the Bible indicates that man’s existence
can be measured only in terms of several thousand years
(as evinced by Christ’s genealogical record, which extends
back to Adam — Luke 3:23ff; see also: Jackson 1978a).
Furthermore,
scripture teaches that human existence extends back to
the beginning of the creation (Isaiah 40:21; Mark 10:6;
Romans 1:20; see Jackson, 1978b). Thus, the age of the
earth can be only several thousand years — not billions
of years! Also see the author’s book: Creation, Evolution,
and the Age of the Earth (2003).
Now,
if there are two views of coal formation — one that contradicts
biblical chronology, and one that can be harmonized with
biblical chronology — which one should the Christian accept?
Additional Considerations
In
addition to the above, however, there are other geophysical
evidences that ought to lead one to reject the evolutionary
uniformitarian theory of coal formation. A brief summary
of some of them is as follows.
Coal beds are not being formed today.
If
the uniformitarian principle, (“the present is the key
to the past”) of coal origin were true, we would expect
to find vast areas where coal is undergoing various stages
of formation today. This, however, is not the case. Whitcomb
and Morris observe: “All known coal beds, therefore, seem
to have been formed in the past and are not continuing
to be formed in the present, as the principle of uniformity
could reasonably be expected to imply” (164).
There are no evolutionary changes in the coal record.
If
coal were formed over an era of millions of years, the
fossilized plant life it contains should reveal a series
of evolutionary changes. Yet, as professor Harold Clark
noted:
In
the Coal Period, which was supposed to have lasted millions
of years and to have submerged over and over again, the
vegetation remained the same. It was practically identical
over the world, and evolutionary assumptions do not seem
to be very consistent with the facts (85).
Polystrate tree trunks
There
are numerous examples of tree trunks extending through
several successive beds of coal, with their alternating
layers of sandstone or shale. This precludes the notion
that these beds formed over vast ages of time. N.A. Rupke
stated:
A
special class of polystrate stems is constituted by stumps
which extend up through a coal seam, together with some
layers of sandstone and sandy slate, or even through two
or more of these coal seams and all inter-bedded strata.
He
thus concluded: “the coal beds were rapidly deposited just
as well as the above-mentioned inorganic sequences” (as
quoted in Lammerts, 154).
Preservation of plant fossils
In
all of the great coal deposits “there are found the leaves
and tissues of plants so exquisitely preserved that it
is absurd to think of the material lying for centuries
rotting in a peat bog or swamp, as the common theory involves” (Price,
215).
Relatively recent formation of coal
A
number of discoveries indicate that coal has been formed
within the era of human history. Near Glasgow, Scotland,
for example, under a mass of boulders, an iron, man-made
instrument was discovered imbedded in a natural seam of
coal seven feet under the surface (Bible-Science Newsletter,
July 15, 1970). One evolutionist admitted: “In a vein of
coal in England there once were found a number of stone
hammers and picks that must have belonged to men way back
in the Stone Age of human history” (Richards, 9:435).
Near
Freiburg, Germany, a certain wooden railroad bridge was
being replaced with steel. The wooden piles which had supported
the weight were found to have turned partially into coal.
This proves that coal can form within the short hundred
year span of the railroad era (Daly, 138).
Rapid formation
Finally,
it has been demonstrated by experiments in recent years
that wood or other cellulose type material, under the proper
conditions of pressure and heat, can be converted into
coal or coal-like products in a matter of hours.
These experiments conclusively prove that the formation
of coal and oil did not necessarily require millions of
years or even thousands of years to form. (Gish, 1-5).
As Derek Ager, a militant evolutionist, conceded a few
years back: “The hurricane, the flood, or the tsunami may
do more in an hour than the ordinary processes of nature
have achieved in a thousand years” (80). Dr. Donald Chittick
has noted that the failure to recognize the relatively
rapid formation of coal and oil, on the part of evolutionary
scientists, has seriously deterred solutions to the energy
crisis that is plaguing much of the world (214).
The
coal record beneath the earth is a serious challenge to
Darwin’s theory of organic evolution.
[This
article was originally published in the print version of
the Christian Courier, October 1978, 14:22-23; recently
revised.]
--Wayne
Jackson
Sources/Footnotes
Ager,
Derek V. (1993), The New Catastrophism (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press).
Clark,
Harold (1967), Genesis and Science (Nashville, TN:
Southern Publishing).
Chittick,
Donald (1984), The Controversy – Roots of the Creation-Evolution
Controversy (Portland, OR: Multnomah Press).
Daly,
Reginald (1972), Earth’s Most Challenging Mysteries (Nutley,
NJ: Craig Press).
Gish,
Duane T. (1971), “Petroleum in Minutes, Coal in Hours,” Acts & Facts,
1.4, (San Diego, CA: Institute for Creation Research).
Jackson,
Wayne (1978a), “The Antiquity of Human History,” Christian
Courier, 14.7, April.
Jackson,
Wayne (1978b), “Compromising the Creation Account,” Bible-Science
Newsletter, 16/8:5-6, August.
Jackson,
Wayne (2003), Creation, Evolution, and the Age of the
Earth (Stockton, CA: Courier Publications).
Lammerts,
Walter, ed. (1976), Why Not Creation? (Grand Rapids:
Baker).
Nevins,
Stuart (1976), “The Origin of Coal,” ICR Impact
Series, November.
Price,
George McCready (n.d.), A Textbook of General Science
for Secondary Schools (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press).
Richards
Topical Encyclopedia (1962),
(New York: Richards).
Whitcomb,
John C. and Morris, Henry (1961), The Genesis Flood (Grand
Rapids: Baker).
December
12, 2006
http://www.christiancourier.com/articles/1318-the-record-buried-in-coal
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