Will Mechanics Allow a Rapid Ice Age Following the Flood?

This work presents mechanisms related to the ice age that followed the worldwide Flood discussed in Genesis. Certain parameters related to material properties and environmental conditions are discussed from modern-day field studies, laboratory tests, and numerical simulations to illustrate connectio...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Horstemeyer, Mark F., Gullett, Phil
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DigitalCommons@Cedarville 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/icc_proceedings/vol5/iss1/19
https://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1165&context=icc_proceedings
Description
Summary:This work presents mechanisms related to the ice age that followed the worldwide Flood discussed in Genesis. Certain parameters related to material properties and environmental conditions are discussed from modern-day field studies, laboratory tests, and numerical simulations to illustrate connections to the past ice age. The goal is to elucidate possibilities of high ice/snow flow rates (surging) that are observed today and speculate if they could have occurred during the ice age that followed the Flood. Field studies indicate that surging, high rate glacial motion, could be caused by five possible mechanisms: soft deformable stratum, “warm” ice, impurities, steep geometric slopes, and large amounts of basal water. To quantify the effects of these five potential surging-enhancement mechanisms, parametric finite element studies were conducted with the following varying parameters: ice/snow material behavior with its microstructure/inclusion features, ice/snow accumulation rates and boundary conditions, temperature effects of the ice/snow pack, geometry of the glacier, and the ice/ground interfaces. Of all the parameters, the finite element analyses show that the ice/ground interface plays the largest role on surging behavior. Furthermore, the mechanisms that cause surging of a glacier could have induced the rapid motion of the glacier/ice sheet that followed the Flood.