Transported Sand

Three scientists — Papaia, Banani, and Ravioli — and their assistant Igor, who work at NASAL, start showing an interest in creationism. Their superiors, worried, send them to a psychologist, Professor Faggioli, a shady character determined to get them fired by making them look insane.

We are in Professor Faggioli’s office, where Ravioli is undergoing evaluation.

Meanwhile, Papaia and Banani continue their conversation about the book Banani found in his garage, which belonged to his grandfather, and talks about the geological evidence of Noah’s flood.

Papaia: What other evidence do we have?

Banani: The thick sandstone layers found around the world. Do you know what that means?

Papaia: Sandstone? That’s hardened sand, right?

Banani: Exactly. Sandstone forms when sand gets compacted and turns into rock. But the question is: where did all that sand come from? The answer seems to be that this sand didn’t come from just one place, but was transported by enormous amounts of water.

Papaia: So you’re saying that water traveled across entire continents? Like some kind of global river?

Banani: Exactly! Geological evidence shows that in certain areas, the sand isn’t native. It was transported by waters that surrounded the whole planet. A global flood, like the one described in the book, could explain it. Massive amounts of water eroded the land, moving the sand and depositing it in layers that we can still find today.

Papaia: Incredible… I never would’ve thought there was so much solid evidence behind something that sounds like just a legend. And yet, if the sand is everywhere, it means the water had tremendous force.

Banani: Exactly. These sandstone layers were created by a cataclysm of global proportions.

Igor: Today we find sand all over the world, even where it shouldn’t be, because of a massive cataclysm that spread it everywhere. Kind of like Banani’s blunders…

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… they pile up everywhere, and they’re unstoppable.

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… And just like sand compacts into rock, Banani’s face gets tougher and tougher.

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… and geologically embarrassing!

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