All Dinosaurs Buried in Water
Dinosaurs in Marine Sediments: A Worldwide Phenomenon by Tim Cleary an Acts & Facts article June 2015.
I love dinosaurs. Enjoyed the article.
He says dinosaur bones are commonly found in marine strata, but is ignored by secular paleontologists.
This is a fact. I collected dinosaur bones with Linn Ottinger near Moab Utah in the Morison Formation. They were often in the rock layer surrounded by articulated clams showing they were buried suddenly alive.
In California and Ankilosaur was found in a Cretaceous marine strata near Carlsbad California. A duckbilled Hadrosaur leg bone was found in marine Cretaceous rock in San Diego. And another in marine Cretaceous rock in Silverado Canyon in Orange County California.
The tracks of dinosaurs are found in the Paluxy River Texas under marine layers filled with marine oysters. And this same oyster layer contained carbonized bones of an Acrocanthosarus.
The Dilophosaur tracks I discovered and researched near Tuba City Arizona was covered by a layer containing dinosaur bones and articulated Unio clams.
And in the Triassic Petrified Forest layer in Arizona a marine horseshoe crab was found, and I found gypsum. Gypsum is an evaporate from marine water.
And all fossils are found in sediment which has is water deposited, this is the meaning of sediment.
However, some claim that crossbeded sandstone is deposited by wind. This is a false. These red sandstones also contain ripple marks created by water.
Also, the Cretaceous (means chalk) dinosaur beds are named for the fact that it is commonly made of marine chalk!
In fact all strata with fossil tracks is commonly found with ripples, mud cracks, and death layers.
Another interesting observation is that most fossils are in marine or marine influenced sediment. And secular paleontologists say these dinosaur graveyards are formed by oceanic incursions onto dry land creating temporary inland shallow seas.
And that most marine fossils have always been found on continental dry land, none have been found in ocean basins.
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