Sand Dunes Around the Earth:Why So Many?
by Owen Borville
December 29, 2022
The existence of sand dunes and deposits around the world gives strong evidence for a global flood that occurred just 4,500 years ago.
These sand dunes occur on every continent on the earth, giving further evidence of a global flood. The sand was catastropically eroded off of the continents and transported by receding floodwaters until deposition of the sand occurred.
Some of these dunes include:
Peru, China, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, Australia, Africa, and France.
Even Antarctica has sand dunes on locations without ice.
While sand dunes commonly develop along coastal areas from longshore ocean currents, there are many sand dunes that exist on the interior of land and these locations could only develop sand dunes if there was catastrophic water flow in these areas. Tranquil and gradual rise and fall of sea level would not create these sand dunes and only catastrophic floodwaters could cause these sand dunes that occur on land. The Sahara has the largest desert in the world, and massive sand dunes develop here. Longshore current could not possibly have created so much sand. Wind is commonly attributed for the formation of sand dunes on land, but wind is just not strong enough to transport and deposit these massive quantities of sand without the help of strong floodwaters.
In addition to sand dunes, there are sand hills across many vast continental areas, such as the South Carolina sandhills. These sand deposits were catastrophically eroded and carried across continents and deposited.
by Owen Borville
December 29, 2022
The existence of sand dunes and deposits around the world gives strong evidence for a global flood that occurred just 4,500 years ago.
These sand dunes occur on every continent on the earth, giving further evidence of a global flood. The sand was catastropically eroded off of the continents and transported by receding floodwaters until deposition of the sand occurred.
Some of these dunes include:
Peru, China, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, Australia, Africa, and France.
Even Antarctica has sand dunes on locations without ice.
While sand dunes commonly develop along coastal areas from longshore ocean currents, there are many sand dunes that exist on the interior of land and these locations could only develop sand dunes if there was catastrophic water flow in these areas. Tranquil and gradual rise and fall of sea level would not create these sand dunes and only catastrophic floodwaters could cause these sand dunes that occur on land. The Sahara has the largest desert in the world, and massive sand dunes develop here. Longshore current could not possibly have created so much sand. Wind is commonly attributed for the formation of sand dunes on land, but wind is just not strong enough to transport and deposit these massive quantities of sand without the help of strong floodwaters.
In addition to sand dunes, there are sand hills across many vast continental areas, such as the South Carolina sandhills. These sand deposits were catastrophically eroded and carried across continents and deposited.