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  • Craters and the Age of Venus

    by Scott Hardin August 30, 2010 2 min read

    Satellite image of the surface of Venus showing craters

    Looks pretty young . . .

    This is an interesting article about craters on Venus.

    Magellan satellite image of craters on Venus

    It really points out the evolutionary bias that the accepted scientific establishment has. No matter what is being studied, even when the truth is standing right in front of them, they are completely unable to identify it because they are so blinded by evolutionary doctrine. They so blindly believe the earth and universe is many billions of years old that they are more willing to expend mental energy to explain this statement,

    Ever since NASA's Magellan spacecraft radar-mapped Venus twenty years ago, researchers have been struck by the relative sparseness and random distribution of its impact craters. The pattern, completely unlike that found on other terrestrial planets, suggests a surface that is uniformly young.

    . . . 'cause it is young

    What this is saying is that the features of Venus suggest that it isn't billions of years old, but is much younger. Rather than even consider that what they are looking at on Venus is indeed a young planet surface, as the Bible implies, they must come up with other explanations as to why Venus looks young. If you read the article, you will see various scientists have different explanations as to how the surface of Venus looks young without actually being young. Note that none of those explanations even considers the possibility that the reason Venus looks young is because it is is young!

    And God made the two great lights—the greater light to rule the day and the lesser light to rule the night—and the stars. Genesis 1:16 ESV

    Until Next Time!
    Science Shepherd