Posted: Feb 23, 2012 2:03 pm
by MattHunX
MrFungus420 wrote:
Lion IRC wrote:
MrFungus420 wrote:
Lion IRC wrote:

They are supposed to laugh at the one about Jonah


Not really.

They would be laughing because the change in salinity in the waters of the world would kill almost everything that lives in water.


Change?
Are you saying flood = more salt out of nowhere or flood = salt magically disappearing?


Neither.

Massive amount of rain (fresh water) mixed in with oceans (salt water) changes the concentration of salt in the water.

When that brackish water overflows the bounds of the ocean and floods into fresh-water sources such as lakes, it will add salt to the fresh water.

Since the gills of fish are function based on the salinity of their native environment, in waters with different salinity, they die. Both fresh-water and salt-water fish. All dead.



:this:

Calilasseia wrote:
Lion IRC wrote:
MrFungus420 wrote:
Lion IRC wrote:

They are supposed to laugh at the one about Jonah


Not really.

They would be laughing because the change in salinity in the waters of the world would kill almost everything that lives in water.


Change?
Are you saying flood = more salt out of nowhere or flood = salt magically disappearing?


Oh for fuck's sake, this has to be one of the most retarded answers I've ever seen. Did you not learn anything in basic chemistry lessons? Such as what happens to the concentration of dissolved substances when you dilute them? Only covering the planet with an extra nine kilometres of water would dilute the oceans substantially. As a result, the salinity of the oceans would drop to the point where it impacted fatally upon the osmoregulatory systems of coral reef fishes and invertebrates, amongst others. On the other hand, being subject to a rapid net increase in salinity, because of the wholesale deluging of the freshwater bodies of the planet in rising seawater during the early stages of the fantasy "global flood", would exterminate a large number of freshwater aquatic organisms, including virtually all the Ostariophysan fishes, several species of which are current inmates of my aquaria.

In addition, not only would all the freshwater aquatic plants be destroyed by salinity changes, they would also be destroyed by finding themselves under an extra nine kilometres of water. Light only penetrates the oceans to a maximum depth of around 500 metres. The photic zone, which is the region within which photosynthesis can take place, extends to only 200 metres. This cutting off from sunlight would also kill the symbiotic zooxanthellae living within coral polyps, and as a consequence, all the world's reef building corals would have been exterminated. That all these taxa are still alive, tells us your fantasy flood never happened.


And :this:

:cheers:

Basics, again. If only theist children would bother to learn that much, if only their traditions would permit it. For some, they don't even get that much (e.g.: JWs). They will remain children, forever. Intellectually immature. :nono: