Three scientists — Papaia, Banani, and Ravioli — and their assistant Igor, who work at NASAL, start getting interested in creationism. Their superiors, worried, send them to see a psychologist, Professor Faggioli, a dubious character determined to get them fired by making them seem crazy.
We’re in Professor Faggioli’s office, where Ravioli is doing the evaluation.
Meanwhile, Papaia and Banani continue their conversation about the book, found by Banani in the garage, which belonged to his grandfather, and discusses the geological evidence of Noah’s flood.
In the waiting room, the discussion about Noah’s flood continues.
Papaia: And besides the rock layers, you said there are coal deposits!
Banani: Exactly. The coal deposits of North America are the same and have the same plant fossils as those in Europe in Great Britain.
In the Northern Hemisphere, the Upper Carboniferous coal deposits (Pennsylvania) of the Eastern USA and Midwest are the same coal deposits, with the same plant fossils, as those in Great Britain and Europe. They stretch across half the globe, from Texas to the Donetz Basin north of the Caspian Sea in the former Soviet Union. In the Southern Hemisphere, the same Permian coal deposits are found in Australia, Antarctica, India, South Africa, and even South America! These deposits share the same type of plant fossils throughout the region (but they are different from those in the Pennsylvania coal deposits).
Papaia: And to form these vast deposits, it took a lot of plants!
Banani: Yes, practically all the plants in the world. In fact, the water completely submerged the land, and the movements of mud and sand did the rest.
Papaia: So, it doesn’t take millions of years to make coal.
Banani: No, quite the opposite. It’s just about having the right conditions. The kind that come from a catastrophe like the global flood.
Igor: To make a natural coal deposit, it doesn’t take millions of years, but just the right conditions. Just like Ravioli’s fish, which are still fossilizing in his backpack.
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… next to a meatball from 2007!
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