Understanding the Mudrock Revolution - Dr. Steve Austin (Conf Lecture)

If you like this technical lecture from the 2017 IGH Conference, you can get it and over 70 more at: isgenesishistory.com/conference/ In this lecture, Dr. Steve Austin explains his findings on mudrocks and the Global Flood as described in scripture.
Dr. Austin is a field research geologist who has done research on six of the seven continents of the world. His research has taken him by helicopter into the crater on Mount St. Helens, by bush plane onto glaciers in Alaska, by raft through the Grand Canyon, on horseback into the high Sierra, by elevator into the world’s deepest coal mines, by SCUBA onto the Great Barrier Reef, by rail into Korean backcountry, by foot onto barren plateaus of southern Argentina, and by four-wheel drive into remote desert areas of Israel, Jordan and Saudi Arabia.
Dr. Austin received his PhD from Pennsylvania State University in sedimentary geology.

Пікірлер: 129

  • @jujubhee
    @jujubhee2 жыл бұрын

    I never tire hearing and pondering the genius of this genesis geologist. I've listened to some videos over 25 tines and still catch things that had not grasped my minds. I love this brother!

  • @jegdev

    @jegdev

    8 ай бұрын

    Maxlow expanding earth

  • @matswessling6600

    @matswessling6600

    3 ай бұрын

    Thus its it clear that you dont understand these matters. Its a big lie.

  • @charlesdunn169
    @charlesdunn16911 ай бұрын

    I Love this brother Thank God for fellow Christians who understand these things. My hope is this info would come to the masses.

  • @AintNoFool
    @AintNoFool2 жыл бұрын

    Just took family to Johnston Ridge Observatory at Mt St Helen. What amazing day! I learned so much. And, we live so close that we see the mountain every day the weather permits. Love these videos!!!

  • @truthisbeautiful7492
    @truthisbeautiful7492 Жыл бұрын

    This is so critical. Watch it more then once!

  • @juantapia8098
    @juantapia80983 жыл бұрын

    "YES" Common sense, Especially knowing our history as taught in My Bible. Thank You for being a forward thinking Scientist whom thinks outside the Box. Well done !!

  • @VernCrisler
    @VernCrisler2 жыл бұрын

    Only someone like Steve Austin could turn mud into something interesting.

  • @grahamamorrisonsr1135
    @grahamamorrisonsr11354 жыл бұрын

    I love this stuff. I had deja vu watching this today. I was first exposed to, and convinced of, catastrophism in college in the seventies. Not by Dr Manley my geology professor, but by an English professor who introduced me to Emmanuel Velikovski. I read Worlds in Collision, whose premise was: what if “mythology” isn’t fiction, but fact. He challenged the paradigms of his time. Yes, he was an atheist and allegedly denied God caused the catastrophic problems (I never read anything where he claimed that, and you cannot prove a negative hypothesis, i.e.; God did NOT do these things). My deja vu was when I began to slip off into sleep during this presentation. No, it wasn’t boring, just incredibly detailed. When I read Velikovski’s Earth in Upheaval, the evidence was overwhelming and repetitive, and I never finished the book because it put me to sleep. I was CONVINCED, but didn’t finish the book. I shouldn’t have read it at bed time :-) This is terrific information that I tolerate well having taken geology in college. Thanks so very much for challenging the paradigm and supporting God’s Word, which is accurate and true. We need to get this out whereothers see it. I have posted “Is Genesis History” many times on Facebook, no one ever comments :-(

  • @anonymike8280

    @anonymike8280

    3 жыл бұрын

    I read Velikovsky in the 1970s when I was a little older than college age. I consider him a kind of intuitive. Many of his claims later were proven correct but his reasons almost always were wrong.That puts him in the same category as a medical layman who might insist that some disease might best be treated in some new way but whose discussion of the underlying pathology itself is highly inaccurate. Another author you might be interested in is Charles Hapgood. Hapgood is associated with two ideas. One of them is the idea that accurate maps of the entire earth existed before the modern era and notably before the time of Columbus. The other one is crustal displacement, which is the idea that the entire crust of the Earth can move over the mantle as a concentric shell, at a rapid rate of speed. Hapgood's noted popular books are "Earth's Shifting Crust" and "Maps of the Ancient Sea Kings". I consider this type of work, especially Velikovsky's work, as belonging to a known literary genre called fantastic travel literature. The basic motif of this literature is that "I went to this exotic place, and I saw these exotic things." Eric Von Daniken's work and all contemporary work about lost worlds, lost civilizations, UFOs and the like belong to this genre. Hapgood's work can be considered science though, and can be treated as either. Albert Einstein wrote a foreword to Hapgood's book on polar shift.

  • @alanthompson8515

    @alanthompson8515

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@anonymike8280 The accepted master of this "fantastic travel literature" genre was of course the late, great Sir Terry Pratchett.

  • @anonymike8280

    @anonymike8280

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@alanthompson8515 Fantastic travel literature is a very old genre. It has to be a claimed personal account and presented as non fiction.

  • @alanthompson8515

    @alanthompson8515

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@anonymike8280 Nah.

  • @marteneqdt

    @marteneqdt

    2 жыл бұрын

    Same, I try to share it, and people seem to be numb to good interesting debates. Even if they would just disagree, but watch it... But most disagree, and don't watch it... I had a very negative comment on a comment I made on a Dr Kurt Wise video. The person who commented on my comment can't have viewed the whole video, just attacked Dr Wise, and me, for the fack that apparently Dr Wise hs never published a scientific paper...? I'm not even sure if that is true, I know that clearly interpreting his findings is marvellous. I know Dr Steve here has defended his thesis on how coal was formed, and this video is amazing. Thanks, Marten

  • @suzieseabee
    @suzieseabee3 жыл бұрын

    10 years ago I had a clay vain near my spring, now it is a soft rock. These things do not take millions or even thousands of years.

  • @kathyjames9250
    @kathyjames92504 жыл бұрын

    Thanks Dr. Austin, this was good exposure to the “Mudrock Revolution” and to the possible alternates to traditional science.

  • @matswessling6600

    @matswessling6600

    3 ай бұрын

    You mean "to science" because this isnt science, it is nothing but madness...

  • @mackenziezimmerer7926
    @mackenziezimmerer79262 жыл бұрын

    I find this facinating with regards to a forensics look at the possibility to a global flood. The biblical inplications of what transpired can very easily by overlooked when all the focus was on 40 days and night of rain only. This mounting evidence presented here can only be dismissed but not denied

  • @cosmictreason2242

    @cosmictreason2242

    Жыл бұрын

    Denied but not refuted

  • @doughouck178
    @doughouck1783 жыл бұрын

    Summary: 59:38 Fine sediment can be deposited rapidly in flowing water (global flood). This challenges the conventional evolutionary "encroaching placid sea" model for creating mudstone.

  • @jamesmilton3490
    @jamesmilton34903 жыл бұрын

    It would seem that cross-lamination in mudrocks could be a highly valuable way to determine paleo current directions given their abundance and great extent.

  • @Captain-Awesome
    @Captain-Awesome2 жыл бұрын

    I’ll join your Revolution sir!! Great Presentation!!

  • @marteneqdt
    @marteneqdt2 жыл бұрын

    Very interesting, In the North of my home country, the Netherlands, in the 30s, the depression years, there was a big employment scheme, where 100s of people dug trenches in in the clay beds outside the flood protection dikes. The clay was piled up, and the tides were flooding the trenches, and every time the water retreated, it left clay particles behind, filling the trenches in again. Then the people would come back, and dig out these clay deposits, pile them up on top of the previous lot they dug out, and let the process repeat itself. This is how the level o of the land was built up, to claim land from the sea. The filling up of these trenches happens/happened very quickly. Not exactly sure how quickly, but we're talking weeks or months, not years, and certainly not hundreds or thousands of years. Some of these areas have been, and still are, farmed for decades, now.

  • @joeclarke9782
    @joeclarke97823 жыл бұрын

    Wow. Certainly a paradigm shift in the making by A. U. S. T. I. N. Assessing Unusual Stratigraphies In Nature. PTL

  • @littleSchmiggy
    @littleSchmiggy2 жыл бұрын

    I loved the bleaching, careful washing used to make mud behave the in the way to make the slow deposition model work. What world has carfully bleached silt particles.

  • @TentoesMe
    @TentoesMe3 жыл бұрын

    hehe I read the title as Understanding the Murdock Revolution🤣

  • @maker-matt

    @maker-matt

    3 жыл бұрын

    Me too. "Tank Murdock"? - Every which way but loose

  • @sherrylhenning5630

    @sherrylhenning5630

    3 жыл бұрын

    I did too! I'm dyslexic. It makes for some amusing mistakes (missed steaks) teehee.....

  • @TentoesMe

    @TentoesMe

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@sherrylhenning5630 Sometimes things don't say what the letters spell and I have to look again. Does that REALLY say...

  • @codythornley8889
    @codythornley88893 жыл бұрын

    Awesome!

  • @jaybadhorse5096
    @jaybadhorse50962 жыл бұрын

    What an amazing channel..thank you for all your work

  • @sherrylhenning5630
    @sherrylhenning56303 жыл бұрын

    Dr. Steve Austin with a wig, tricorn hat, crossed bandellaros, camp shorts, white socks, hiking boots, rock hammer lifted high......I'm gonna have to draw that!

  • @georgeloyie7456
    @georgeloyie74562 жыл бұрын

    Good stuff, I'd have never known, Bless You!

  • @Grunner42
    @Grunner423 жыл бұрын

    I wonder if this understanding of particle deposition in layers could be applied to snow falling and blowing around. I know I've seen many laminar layers show up in cross sections of a single snowfall. Could this contribute to how the layers in ice cores formed?

  • @obiecanobie919

    @obiecanobie919

    2 жыл бұрын

    Of course, dust load,temperature changes even light conditions are all reflected in such layers.There are quite many contributors that can be analyzed given proper understanding of this events .

  • @Tell_It_Right
    @Tell_It_Right Жыл бұрын

    Stone Cold Dr. Steve Austin!

  • @valerieprice1745
    @valerieprice174510 ай бұрын

    I enjoyed the presentation, and I appreciate the information, but people need to be warned against fracking.

  • @hennyberends8521
    @hennyberends85213 жыл бұрын

    Great to see true science of mudrock is the historical Biblical flood.

  • @bontrom8
    @bontrom8 Жыл бұрын

    Passionate cause

  • @strayspark1967
    @strayspark1967Ай бұрын

    i look up mudrock revolution and still only 1 video and a bunch of videos on college admissions......eventually, maybe they will come around. meanwhile, thanks steve for your work

  • @mordeys
    @mordeys3 жыл бұрын

    a question about his mom.. did she not just allow his fascination with 'mud' or did she ask him questions about why the mud did things? did she ask him to figure out why it looks like it does or acts like it does? those simple few questions that take a minute to ask and a few minutes to listen when they figure it can cause a child to follow a path that will fulfill their God given purpose. simple effort can have complicated and massive effects on the life of a child. just a thought.

  • @alexscott730
    @alexscott7304 жыл бұрын

    The audio in your videos keeps cutting out once in a while🤔

  • @phylismaddox4880
    @phylismaddox48804 жыл бұрын

    Interesting lecture. Thanks. Am I the only one wondering who put the Calgon in the oceans bazillions of years ago? ;)

  • @joseh3564

    @joseh3564

    3 жыл бұрын

    "Calgon, take me away!"

  • @seekrighteousness297
    @seekrighteousness2974 жыл бұрын

    This is common sense that is taught in 8th grade science they built a big machine along time ago that they could monitor this process its called a hydro electric dam they had to divert all the silt and mineral deposits that rushed into and jammed the dam after diverting all those deposits they noticed how the gravity sludge effect and falling particle fell faster and not straight but at a grade they also learned that depending on how they built and at what angles made the sludge and silt move faster or slower at one time one of them was built wrong and slit and mud was splayed out for miles all large bodies of water have current controlled by gravity and the moons cycle so the water was never still enough for the silt falling for millions of years to work to create the mudrock formations to work

  • @cosmictreason2242

    @cosmictreason2242

    Жыл бұрын

    Your comment is incoherent and ignores turbulence

  • @UserRandJ

    @UserRandJ

    11 ай бұрын

    I appreciated your comment- I have seen the effects of gravity in the mud rock- you can see gravity is evident as you mentioned, the various inclines determined how fast or slow it flowed down the inclines with gravity. The base of the mudrock is bulged out- slumped with gravity- all that weight up top. The size of the hills that sediment covered, has corresponding rock- for example on flatter areas, the mud flowed wide and flat- so now there's huge slabs of rock, with ripples like waves in the rock surface, as the mud oozed slowly down the incline. Steep hills, the mud dropped fast, and formed massive boulders, as well as caves- the caves I've seen were where debris had been trapped in that mud, that the mud wrapped over it/ the debris supported the weight if the cave. This stuff is awesome to go view. Jake

  • @UserRandJ

    @UserRandJ

    11 ай бұрын

    @Cosmic Treason You did not understand the guys comment. He is correct. And his example is good, it does represent what is seen in the mudrock. Gravity has left its mark in all the mudrock. I had never thought of this occurring at hydroplants. Of course they would have experienced it, and have to determine how best to manage it. Jake

  • @UserRandJ

    @UserRandJ

    11 ай бұрын

    @Cosmic Treason In his example, the turbulence of the hydroplant is going to be a known force, and they did not struggle with the turbulence. He was discussing the effect of gravity. Gravity is very easily seen in the mudrock sediment, and yes, turbulence also. It was a tectonic flood. Massive tsunamis. Jake

  • @kenday82
    @kenday824 күн бұрын

    Hydroplate theory answers a lot of questions.

  • @brucerenton
    @brucerenton7 ай бұрын

    So paddlewheels in a racetrack simulator shear the floccuals? The current velocities seem to be low for catastrophic flooding. What do you estimate the current rates were on the deposition floor bottom? Enjoyed the lecture.

  • @chrisanderson5317
    @chrisanderson53177 ай бұрын

    Herodatus mentioned this in his History. When Greeks established colonies, they took a pot of earth and buried it beneath the temple of the patron god in the new city-state. He related how in one daughter city, a pot of this earth was uncovered and that it had turned to stone. Soil turned to stone in hundreds, not millions of years.

  • @craig-3799
    @craig-37995 жыл бұрын

    About time.

  • @NeanderthalWoman-ou8ev
    @NeanderthalWoman-ou8ev9 ай бұрын

    Has all this been done yet? Would love to hear

  • @KevinB-pd3me

    @KevinB-pd3me

    9 ай бұрын

    Same here. I was thinking toward the end that maybe he should set up a gofundme. He definitely has the motivation to get it done.

  • @NM50555
    @NM505553 жыл бұрын

    Geologist named steve Austin .. "Stone" cold steve Austin lol

  • @Ka112eb
    @Ka112eb4 жыл бұрын

    how is your machine coming along?

  • @Freddy-Da-Freeloadah
    @Freddy-Da-Freeloadah Жыл бұрын

    @17:05 I WANNA KNOW ABOUT SHALE ROCKS! That's where all the fossils are around here in Western MA... The first dinosaur footprints were found just down the road from me in Gill MA, in shale rock! I have never found a fossil though... Sad. IMHO

  • @jaywinters2483
    @jaywinters248311 ай бұрын

    great video but we can't see the power points because they're all white-outed. too much light

  • @KenJackson_US
    @KenJackson_US2 жыл бұрын

    So how's the *mudrock revolution* going? Did we build our *racetrack flume?* Update?

  • @IsGenesisHistory

    @IsGenesisHistory

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hello Ken! Dr. Austin's racetrack flume is one of the projects we are backing through the "Genesis Fund." You can find more about that and project updates at the following link: www.isgenesishistory.com/donate.

  • @ozowen

    @ozowen

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@IsGenesisHistory I'm curious, howcome all these creationists institutes rely on donations and ticket sales etc? Why have they not paired with businesses to exploit their superior understanding of Biology and Geology to benefit human society and to self fund. I just know there are wealthy enough folks in the ranks of believers, so I'm struggling to understand why no creationist "institute" has never stepped beyond donations and similar.

  • @cosmictreason2242

    @cosmictreason2242

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ozowen your argument amounts to “Why aren’t you asking for Christians to fund your research, instead of adding Christians to fund your research?” You have not asked a coherent question

  • @UserRandJ

    @UserRandJ

    11 ай бұрын

    @ozowen Yeah, you're right. Well, if science was not misconstrued and taught as virtual fact intext books- then what is actually seen in nature which is complex design, and also evidence of global flood, could be taught as truth. Text books people made their careers from, and profits. So they don't care if they are right or wrong. For example- is abiogenesis shown in evidence? Yet they can teach it. And you are not questioning that? They are funded, to tell lies. Truth is not funded. How about that. J

  • @joeclarke9782
    @joeclarke97824 жыл бұрын

    I like the comparison to Moses. Viva la Mud!

  • @Mwaynick
    @Mwaynick8 ай бұрын

    The sediments in the strata of the Grand Canyon aren’t from pyroclastic flows and they are completely different lithology. The silt and mud sediment becomes entrained in the water column and continues to stay suspended until the energy subsided. This is how we get a bouma sequence. You see the mud at the very top. You don’t see that in the Grand Canyon, you see many many many layers of mud and sand successions happening. This means it was many events that caused it not a singular spillover or flood.

  • @435thblackeagle8

    @435thblackeagle8

    2 күн бұрын

    Those layers were put down by Noah's flood and when Grand Lake spilled over some time after, it cut through those layers in a matter of weeks creating Grand Canyon. Mount Saint Helens did the same thing about a year after the eruption when a massive mud slide cut down through the layers of ash creating a mini Grand Canyon.

  • @Mwaynick

    @Mwaynick

    2 күн бұрын

    @@435thblackeagle8read my comment again. The Grand Canyon shows many different paleo environments and differing events, not just one. You learn this in geology 101.

  • @cristianpopescu78
    @cristianpopescu783 жыл бұрын

    I was thiking about the relation between erosion and landscape: es the evolutionists believe all layers have been formed by gradual Erosion to Sediments and its layind down.But how could such process occur,while ther were yet no big Mountains?! Sediments are washed up by certain degree angle of earth surface in the carboniferouse era when forest were buried by sediments .

  • @cosmictreason2242

    @cosmictreason2242

    Жыл бұрын

    What is even your question?

  • @robdesherlia7315
    @robdesherlia73157 ай бұрын

    If the Bible says the earth is 7 thousand years old . Why do you think the earth is millions of years old?

  • @Shifty8444
    @Shifty84443 жыл бұрын

    More like Mudfossill's

  • @petetumas6513
    @petetumas65134 жыл бұрын

    Sadly, "above my pay grade" -- Apparently this is important, but I have no layman's ability to use this Insider Information.

  • @TS-jm7jm

    @TS-jm7jm

    4 жыл бұрын

    what do you mean above your paygrade?

  • @penponds

    @penponds

    3 жыл бұрын

    Basically he’s saying that traditional views on how millions of years are required to explain how very very slow deposition of mud (clay sized) particles are flawed - because the traditional views don’t match real world and experimentally demonstrated processes of mud deposition which are multiple orders of magnitude faster. That helps support the Biblical flood as the process responsible for the geologic sedimentary rock record above the basement pre-Flood granites, such as are found at bottom of Grand Canyon.

  • @cosmictreason2242

    @cosmictreason2242

    Жыл бұрын

    They’ve proven quick layering in laboratory settings so the food is true and evolution is false

  • @cosmictreason2242
    @cosmictreason2242 Жыл бұрын

    Hard science. Leading edge research. We are the pioneers, evolution believers are the religious dogmatists.

  • @Thrusce
    @Thrusce5 жыл бұрын

    I wonder if at some point knowing the hydrodynamics of mudrock settling would allow you to predict economically valuable deposits more correctly. In other words, money talks.

  • @promiskept

    @promiskept

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@ozowen5961 The love of money is the root all evil, not money itself. They that love it, do so because of the power they gain over others who will serve them for some of it. When truth about creation brings God into the bidding, they don't want to capitalize on what would uphold our Creator's rightful rule over us, and smash the seduction of their idolatry.

  • @promiskept

    @promiskept

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@ozowen5961 I suspect that there are those who have observed the same geological strata patterns mentioned here, and have greatly benefited from their explorations and drilling, accordingly. However, they would NEVER let others know that, since then they might become competitors for easy access to abundant oil and gas. Besides, if creationists uses any of this to bring MORE scientific credibility to the Bible: then folks might start thinking again about other moral issues that they'd rather not deal with. This part is lengthy enough, but I'll address health science too, if you'd like.

  • @promiskept

    @promiskept

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@ozowen5961 Is your argument that nothing scientific was found in what was said here, BECAUSE he is a creationist? I was simply stating that the same science might be already known and used by wealthy mining and oil developers. All of the rest of your excuses to discount have NOTHING to do with science.

  • @seekrighteousness297

    @seekrighteousness297

    4 жыл бұрын

    First point more money has been made in this world over beliefs and religion than anything else but sadly with love of money brings greed, jealously, murder and war Second point money is being made off this technology it is part of the science they use to find oil

  • @seekrighteousness297

    @seekrighteousness297

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@ozowen5961 now you are stating opinions i have given 2 perfectly researchable answers there are scientists who are recongnised and acclaimed all over the world who are who are working and making money off of creationism there are speakers and book writers making money all over the world on the science of creationism there are engineers and many others making machines and products today based off of what has been learned through creationism its all researchable look it up now if you just want to argue i am sorry i am not that type God Bless

  • @Mosselimossan
    @Mosselimossan4 ай бұрын

    NO swedish language

  • @Hackerinsidemyphone_caution
    @Hackerinsidemyphone_caution4 жыл бұрын

    The inbox always shows notification. When you get in my phone. Yesterdays all that dailgue was for the handshake. You know the term tech savvy. Roflmao Don't fk with me. I don't even like you. It's my philosophy. Today's people dont deserve. Anything. People like you.

  • @ogedeh
    @ogedeh2 жыл бұрын

    Snake oil salesman

  • @cosmictreason2242

    @cosmictreason2242

    Жыл бұрын

    He’s literally showing you hard scientific proof from lab experiments. You clearly don’t care about facts

  • @UserRandJ

    @UserRandJ

    11 ай бұрын

    Did you give it 5 minutes? I doubt it. You have a forked tongue tho. Have you ever gone and looked at mudrock? Stuck on your toy computer huh? I bet. Jake