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https://studentshare.org/english/1430426-a-puzzling-or-mysterious-subject-from-a-field-of.
But many still consider the formation of the Grand Canyon an unsolved mystery. Some challenging the evolutionary account might ask how the relatively tiny river could erode such a colossal canyon when rivers like the Nile and the Amazon, which are many, many times larger and swifter, have not eroded away similar or larger canyons (Brown, 2008, p. 86). But if the Colorado River did not cut out the Grand Canyon, what did? One account from a former evolutionist, Navy SEAL, and MIT graduate, Dr. Walt Brown, lets the evidence left behind do the talking, demonstrating that the Grand Canyon was the result of a massive sheet of water rapidly sweeping over and cutting through the region in weeks – not erosion from a slow-running river over millions of years (Brown, 2008, p. 107). Once true scientific analysis is examined to uncover the mystery of the formation of the Grand Canyon and the smoke of unscientific theories that try to squeeze it into the evolutionary timeframe and process is cleared, the most spectacular natural wonder in America becomes a testimony of what the rapid cataclysmic force of water can do.
But from where could so much water come? . What are the results of such breaching? The Strait of Gibraltar was most likely the result of the breach of the Mediterranean “lake,” the Bosporus and Dardanelles were evidently cut by the Black Sea’s rupture, and the opening at the Golden Gate Bridge was likely caused by the breach of “Lake California,” which filled the Great Central Valley before dumping into the Pacific (Brown, 2008, p. 107). So, when examining the topography around the Grand Canyon, one notices that just west of the Grand Canyon’s eastern border straddling the Four Corners region are two gigantic dry lakebeds ?
Grand Lake and Hope Lake. The lowest points of these lakebeds are on their western banks, where both show geologic evidence of breaches ? one triggering the other (Brown, 2008, p. 117-18). Because these colossal lakes had no oceans or seas to dump into, their breaches violently channeled the Grand Canyon, as more water than what is contained in the five Great Lakes combined gushed out from the western banks of Grand Lake and Hopi Lake to rip a 230-mile-long, 4-18-mile wide, and one-mile deep gash in the land in just weeks.
Only a rapidly moving sheet of water ripping through the area would provide enough force to create the adjacent massive side canyons and hundreds-of-miles-long caverns not connected to the river (Brown, 2008, p. 107). But could such a massive canyon have only been created in weeks? Many geologists learned much from the eruptions of Mt. St. Helens in the early 1980s, which melted several glaciers that caused torrents of water to rapidly cut smaller-scaled stratified canyons and reformed Spirit Lake.
To evolutionists’ chagrin, the stratified canyon walls resembling the Grand Canyon’s resulted from the lowering water level –
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