Early earth and the problem with water.
Being that early earth was very volcanic, a vast producing oxygen system has to exist to produce enough free oxygen to combine with hydrogen, and convert to water. In fact, the amount of oxygen has to be so vast, there has to be enough, to make enough water, to fill all of our oceans. The old earth believers will use one of a few excuses for this:
| 1) The water came from under the ground, and up through the volcanoes. |
Really? So there is a mysterious thing under ground that poofs oxygen into existence to make water, so that it can spew out on the surface of the earth? What is this process called? And how did it happen?
| 2) The plants produced oxygen. They converted Co2 to O2. |
Really? Plants also require water. So which came first: Water, or oxygen? Remember, to make water oxygen is required. Unless someone would like to produce oxygen-less water.
| 3) Lava rock can produce oxygen, so plants are not needed. |
Really? If lava rock can produce such a enormous amount of oxygen to make it rain all over the world, on early earth. Why are we even worried about the Rain Forests? It is because lava rock cannot produce the vast amount needed to produce enough rain. So that plants can grow and convert Co2 into O2. The only thing science will claim on this issue is that this can happen. They will not release the actual amount of O2 lava rock can produce. Nor will they release the info on how long it takes to produce that amount.
To break down the lava rock to produce oxygen, rain is required. So which came first: Oxygen from lava rock, or the water it takes to break it down? Which brings us back to square one. How do you get water before oxygen can be produced by plants (that require oxygen), or lava rock (that requires water to make oxygen)? Evolutionists answer: Poof, and there was water.
Here is an example of the old earth tale of how things came to be: http://www.astrodome.clara.co.uk/fctgeog.html
| Our planet was formed along with the Sun and other members of the solar system about 4,500 million years ago from a cloud of collapsing dust and gas in space. As our Earth started to form an enormous amount of heat was produced - a heat that remains within the Earth today.
More gas and dust meant more mass and gravity, and soon the heavier elements of this vast ball, such as iron & nickel sank to the centre to form the super-dense core. The lighter elements rose to the surface and made the Earth's first thin granite-like crust. This crust was constantly being broken open by large cracks known as fissures, and volcanoes which let out the trapped gasses below. This gave the Earth its first atmosphere of Ammonia, Carbon dioxide and Water vapour.
As the planet continued to cool, so the atmosphere began to condense and then the rains fell for thousands of years. Earthquakes, lightning and ultra-violet light from the Sun changed these molecules into those that could begin a life process. Living organisms existed on the earth at least 3100 million years ago. These early plants absorbed the carbon-dioxide in the atmosphere using the carbon to build its tissue and threw away the oxygen. And it was this process of giving out oxygen that thankfully gave us an atmosphere suitable for life. The oxygen created the ozone layer shielding the surface from the sun's ultra-violet light, and enabled plants and animals to move onto the land. The first land plants appeared in the late Silurian period, just over 400 million years ago. |
The mystery water maker from below the surface of the earth. Makes enough water vapor to make it rain? Do all planets have the mystery water making thing that spews out water vapor? If not, how did earth get one? So you see, they just assume it just happens. Poof, and there was water.

Then again, it could have been the volcano God that did it.