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Below is the online edition of In the Beginning: Compelling Evidence for Creation and the Flood, by Dr. Walt Brown. Copyright © Center for Scientific Creation. All rights reserved.

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[ The Fountains of the Great Deep > Frozen Mammoths > Details Relating to the Lake Drowning Theory ]

Note: From here to page 290, the reader may wish to examine only discussions concerning theories of personal interest.

Details Relating to the Lake Drowning Theory

12. Red Circle Image Abundant Food.  Lack of winter sunlight inside the Arctic Circle would choke off the mammoth’s food supply each winter, even if temperatures were warm or the mammoth was “adapted” to the cold.

13. Red Circle Image Warm Climate.  Vegetation in the digestive tracts of frozen mammoths shows that they died in a mild climate during the late summer or early fall when frozen lakes or rivers would not exist. Many weeks of freezing temperatures are needed to form ice thick enough for a large, hoofed animal to venture far enough from shore to drown.

14. Yellow Circle Image Yedomas and Loess, Yellow Circle Image Multi-Continental, Yellow Circle Image Frozen Muck, Yellow Circle Image Upright.  The lake drowning theory does not explain why mammoths, yedomas, and loess are related, why these peculiar events occurred over such wide areas on three continents, where so much muck originated, why muck has sometimes buried forests, why yedomas contain so much carbon, or why so many mammoth bodies and skeletons were found upright.

15. Red Circle Image Rock Ice.  The ice near several carcasses was not lake or river ice.  It was Type 3 ice, not Type 1 ice.

16. Yellow Circle Image Sudden Freezing, Red Circle Image -150°F.  Although burial in peat bogs can retard bacterial decay and preserve bodies for thousands of years, only a rapid and extreme temperature drop can stop the destructive activity of enzymes and stomach acids.

17. Yellow Circle Image Dirty Lungs, Red Circle Image Peppered Tusks. Drowning in a lake would not fire millimeter-size particles, rich in iron and nickel, into one side of mammoth tusks or force gravel into Dima’s lungs. Nor would silt, clay, and gravel work their way into Dima’s intestines after a sudden drowning.

18. Red Circle Image Animal Mixes.  If mammoths occasionally fell through ice on an arctic lake, why are the bones of so many temperate animals found together? Why do prey lie near their predators? Large, hoofed animals seldom venture out on frozen lakes.

19. Red Circle Image Vertical Compression.  Falling into a lake would not produce the vertical compression found in Dima and Berezovka.

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