エピソード

  • Awesome Science: The Grand Canyon
    2020/06/01

    In this episode, Noah travels to Northern Arizona to find out how the 40 layers of the Grand Canyon were laid down by the Global Flood, then cut quickly, all through catastrophic processes.  He then compares other geologic processes found around the world which show additional evidence of quick geologic catastrophe.

    To get the full video episode on our VOD platform, go to AwesomeSciTV.com

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    27 分
  • Awesome Science: Yellowstone
    2020/06/13

    In this episode, Noah travels to Wyoming to explore America's first national park and show evidence of how many of the parks features were created by catastrophe and not long ages. He pays specific attention to the Petrified Forests, showing evidence of why they were not twenty-seven separate forests created over long ages, but quickly laid down by water and fossilized in a matter of a few years.

    To get the full video episode on our VOD platform, go to AwesomeSciTV.com

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    25 分
  • Awesome Science: Meteor Crater / Petrified Forest National Park
    2020/06/20

    In this episode, Noah travels to Arizona to explore two very odd geologic sites, petrified forests laid down beneath thin rock layers on the desert floor, and a large gouge on the sedimentary layers near the Grand Canyon. The first site reflects the catastrophic events during the Flood and its aftermath. The second site, under a hundred miles away, has helped scientists discover catastrophic processes around the world by bombardment of meteors (which are NOT responsible for the extension of the dinosaurs).

    To get the full video episode on our VOD platform, go to AwesomeSciTV.com

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    26 分
  • Awesome Science: Explore Zion/Yosemite
    2020/06/27

    In this episode, Noah travels to the Southwest to explore Yosemite National Park and Zion National Park. He’ll discover amazing evidence for the quick formation of the granite rocks at Yosemite during the Flood, the massive erosion of the granite, and also the quick accumulation of ice in the valleys from ideal conditions right after the Flood. At Zion Noah will explore evidence of how the massive sandstone layers were made during the Flood, then eroded during the sheet and channel erosion as the flood waters receded.

    To get the full video episode on our VOD platform, go to AwesomeSciTV.com

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    26 分
  • Awesome Science: Explore Mount St. Helens Pt1
    2020/07/04
    In this episode, Noah travels to one of the few active volcanoes in the contiguous United States to find out why it’s called, “God’s gift to creationists.” Through cataclysmic events back in the 1980s, similar geologic features worldwide can now be explained by the Flood using Mount St. Helens as a scale model. Noah explores each of these features at the mountain, including a huge lava cave and lava cast forests. The features found here can help us understand catastrophic processes that were thought by secular scientists to take millions of years taking only hours or days.

    To get the full video episode on our VOD platform, go to AwesomeSciTV.com

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    26 分
  • Awesome Science: Explore Mount St. Helens Pt2
    2020/07/11

    In this episode, Noah travels to one of the few active volcanoes in the contiguous United States to find out why it’s called, “God’s gift to creationists.” Through cataclysmic events back in the 1980s, similar geologic features worldwide can now be explained by the Flood using Mount St. Helens as a scale model. Noah explores each of these features at the mountain, including a huge lava cave and lava cast forests. The features found here can help us understand catastrophic processes that were thought by secular scientists to take millions of years taking only hours or days.

    To get the full video episode on our VOD platform, go to AwesomeSciTV.com

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    25 分
  • Awesome Science: Explore the John Day Fossil Beds
    2020/07/18

    In this episode, Noah travels to Eastern Oregon and explore the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument. It’s here that thousands of feet of Columbia River Basalt are exposed by a major erosional event, most likely the global flood. John Day Fossil Beds are also have the largest collection of mammal fossils in the world. These fossils are supposed millions of years old, yet they show very little change from present mammals. Noah will dig for fossils and explore cool locations such as the Palisades, the Painted Hills, and Picture Gorge. He’ll show strong evidence for this area being formed and eroded quickly just a few thousand years ago.

    To get the full video episode on our VOD platform, go to AwesomeSciTV.com
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    26 分
  • Awesome Science: Explore Glacier National Park
    2020/07/25

    In this episode, Noah travels to northwestern Montana to explore the amazing sites and geology at Glacier National Park. He researches evidence for this area being created and eroded quickly by the effects of the global Flood. He'll share why the Flood provided the right mechanisms to cause the Ice Age and how the end of the Ice Age provides the right conditions for the massive extinctions of mammals like the woolly mammoths.

    To get the full video episode on our VOD platform, go to AwesomeSciTV.com
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    26 分