The total rise of the Oceans is more than 400ft from the peak of the ice. Noah's flood would only account for a 5ft rise in the Ocean levels if the RAIN was from the ice melting. That isn't enough to change the salinity of the Oceans to any great extent, compared to a 400 ft rise. How much would the salinity rise from that drop in water levels?Yeah, on re-reading Bar's post I have to agree with that. Creationists might also argue that a global flood would have caused large changes in temperature and salinity too, which would do a lot of damage to marine organisms, but I haven't seen anything that intelligent from them. Besides, the record shows at least five major extinction events separated by tens of millions, sometimes hundreds of millions, of years. But I suppose someone who believes the planet is only 6 to 10 thousand years old won't be impressed by the facts.
You (non-believers) should get the method of how the water was delivered before claiming the flood was a runoff/rising method rather than rainfall.
If the last ice-age meant the Ocean levels were 400ft lower how much would that raise the salinity of salt water? That didn't seem to end life in all the Oceans.
That is always the case when you forget to provide any example to backup your words.I declared I was god and nobody remembered the next day! I guess people have selective memories.