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Awesome Science

Season 1 2014

  • 30m
  • 3h 59m (7 episodes)
  • Documentary

15 episodes

Series Premiere

1x01 Explore the Grand Canyon

  • no air date32m

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.

Learn How:
-The layers in the Grand Canyon show evidence as being laid down in less than a year
-The Grand Canyon was cut in just days, not millions of years
-Other geologic features explain the quick cutting of the Grand Canyon
-The Biblical record can be trusted as earth’s history book

1x02 Explore Yellowstone National Park

  • 2014-04-05T00:00:00Z30m

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.

Learn How:
-The Geologic Column is best explained by the Global Flood
-Supervolcanoes were used to shape the new earth after the Flood
-Many of the geologic features in Yellowstone were created quickly
-The Petrified Forests in Yellowstone were formed in just a few years

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).

Learn How:

Millions of acres of petrified forests were created during the Flood
The the amazing Teepees were created by underwater volcanic action
Meteor Crater was the key to recognizing other craters around the world
A large meteor was NOT responsible for killing off the dinosaurs

2014-04-26T00:00:00Z

1x04 Explore Yosemite & Zion

1x04 Explore Yosemite & Zion

  • 2014-04-26T00:00:00Z40m

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.

Learn How:

-The evidence of radiohalos shows quick formation of the granite rocks
-Large canyons can only be explained with massive floodwaters
-The Ice Age could have formed in 500 years after the Flood
-The development of crossbeds in the sandstone indicate water deposition
-Sheet erosion and channelized erosion work on a worldwide scale

2014-05-10T00:00:00Z

1x05 Explore Mount St. Helens

1x05 Explore Mount St. Helens

  • 2014-05-10T00:00:00Z45m

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.

Learn How:
-The events at Mount St. Helens show rapid strata formation and erosion
-Other huge canyons such as the Grand Canyon, can be explained through catastrophic processes
-The massive coal beds were formed quickly during the Flood
-The catastrophe at Spirit Lake explains other petrified forests, like at Yellowstone
-God created life on earth to recover quickly after the Flood

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.

Learn How:
-What conditions near the end of the Flood would have caused massive amounts of magma to escape to the surface and build layers quickly
-There is very little evidence for major evolution in the fossil record
-The Flood would have caused chaos in the layers of sediments
-The Flood explains water and wind gaps
-Fossil leaves show quick burial and fossilization at the beginning of the Flood

2014-04-19T00:00:00Z

1x13 Explore Meteor Crater

1x13 Explore Meteor Crater

  • 2014-04-19T00:00:00Z30m

1x14 Explore Zion National Park

  • 2014-05-03T00:00:00Z30m

2014-05-17T00:00:00Z

1x15 Explore Mount St. Helens

1x15 Explore Mount St. Helens

  • 2014-05-17T00:00:00Z30m
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