There Were Dinosaurs on the Ark! Dr. Tommy Mitchell, (?) Bryan Osborne - podcast episode cover

There Were Dinosaurs on the Ark! Dr. Tommy Mitchell, (?) Bryan Osborne

Apr 18, 201942 min
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EXPLICIT! Dr. Tommy Mitchell holds an MD from Vanderbilt University School of Medicine and had a thriving medical practice for 20 years before pursuing creation ministry fulltime. Since 2005, Dr. Mitchell has served as a speaker and author for Answers in Genesis.

(MS?) Bryan Osborne holds a master’s degree in education from Lee University. Bryan taught Bible history in a public school for 13 years, and has been teaching Christians to defend their faith for nearly 20 years. Bryan is now a speaker and author for Answers in Genesis.

Dinosaurs became extinct about 65 million years ago. This extinction event occurred between the Cretaceous and Tertiary periods and wiped out about 50 percent of all other organisms then living on the planet.

Because the dinosaurs died out in a relatively short period of time, scientists surmise that some sort of global disaster had caused this massive extinction event. Some extinction theories include an increase in volcanism,a change in the climate, the movement of continents and the consumption of dinosaur eggs by evolving mammalian species.

In the 1980s, Luis Alvarez proposed one of the most probable theories for the extinction. He believed that an extraterrestrial object such as an asteroid or meteorite crashed on Earth, throwing up debris into the atmosphere. This debris effectively blocked out much of the sun's light, causing plants to die worldwide, which led to the extinction of many species unable to cope with this climate change.

https://www.reference.com/pets-animals/did-dinosaurs-become-extinct-2335f631818c4485

Sixty-five million years ago, the last of the non-avian dinosaurs went extinct. So too did the giant mosasaurs and plesiosaurs in the seas and the pterosaurs in the skies. Plankton, the base of the ocean food chain, took a hard hit. Many families of brachiopods and sea sponges disappeared. The remaining hard-shelled ammonites vanished. Shark diversity shriveled. Most vegetation withered. In all, more than half of the world's species were obliterated.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/prehistoric-world/dinosaur-extinction/

For 165 million years, dinosaurs dominated land, sea, and sky. Long-necked Brachiosauruses lumbered along like mobile four-story buildings. Tyrannosaurus rex chased down prey with 50 to 60 teeth as big as bananas. Mosasaurs stretching 55 feet from snout to tail terrorized the seas, consuming everything they could catch.

But 66 million years ago, the world’s climate drastically changed. Dinosaurs had thrived in the warm temperatures and mild weather of the Mesozoic era. All of a sudden, the Earth became much colder and darker. Plants died and food became scarce. All the dinosaurs—except for the ancestors of modern birds—and three quarters of the creatures living on Earth went extinct.

https://www.popsci.com/how-did-dinosaurs-go-extinct

Evolutionists want to make us believe that dinosaurs became extinct 65 million years ago to support their theory of   evolution.  But if this were true, there would never have been any interaction between men and dinosaurs.  So are there any?  Yes! There are many accounts of dragons in folklore all around the world.  There's even a dinosaur account in the Bible.  We read about a dinosaur in Job chapter 40: 

http://www.6000years.org/frame.php?page=dinosaurs


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