“What MSH [Mount Saint Helens] demonstrates is not
that the
fossil
forests at places like Yellowstone were deposited by a giant water flood,
but
that they were deposited in a volcanic environment like MSH”.
Kevin Nelstead
This 2020 article needed to be written:
What does Mt St Helens teach us about Noah’s flood? Almost nothing. –
GeoChristian
What does Mt St Helens
teach us about Noah’s flood? Almost nothing.
All I got from
Mt St Helens (MSH) in the days following its May 18, 1980 eruption was a few
pretty sunsets. I was an undergraduate student in my first year at the
University of Utah, and most of the ash cloud passed far north of Salt Lake
City. MSH became more significant for me a few years later as a geology
graduate student at Washington State University, where my research project
involved analysis and correlation of Cascade Range tephra (volcanic ash) layers
buried at various levels in the Quaternary Palouse Loess of eastern Washington.
Some of these tephra layers correlated to ancient eruptions of MSH, dated
around 13,000 and 36,000 years ago.
Fortieth
Anniversary
Due in part to
easy accessibility, the 1980 eruptions of MSH have been studied more closely
than just about any other explosive volcanic eruption in history. Geologists
have learned a great deal about certain types of volcanic deposits from this
natural laboratory.
Young-Earth
creationists (YECs) claim that Mt St Helens has provided many proofs that
Noah’s flood could have been responsible for Earth’s sedimentary rock layers,
fossil record, landforms, and more. May 18, 2020 marks the fortieth anniversary
of the 1980 eruption of MSH, and I would like to look at what some of these YEC
claims are, and whether the claims are valid. Three YEC arguments I will look
at are:
- Rapid formation of volcanic sediments at MSH show
that Earth’s sedimentary rock record could have been deposited during
Noah’s flood.
- Rapid canyon formation at MSH establishes that
other canyons, such as the Grand Canyon, could have formed during Noah’s
flood.
- Logs associated with Spirit Lake demonstrate that
fossil forests and coal in the geologic record could have been formed by
Noah’s flood.
It turns out
that each of these arguments is of limited validity. The MSH eruptions had an
impact on geological thinking at a time when geologists were becoming more
aware of catastrophic events in Earth history, but this does not confirm the
claims that YECs make about MSH.
MSH and
Rapid Sedimentation
The May 18,
1980 eruption of MSH did not involve extrusion of fountains or rivers of lava
flowing over the landscape. Instead, this was an explosive eruption, ejecting
volcanic ash particles high into the atmosphere, as well as ground-hugging
pyroclastic flows that blasted northwards from the volcano.
Pyroclastic
flows consist of fast moving, hot volcanic gases mixed with blobs of molten
material, volcanic glass, minerals, and rock fragments. This material may be
hotter than 400°C (750°F), flowing across the landscape at hundreds of miles
per hour. As the hot cloud of material slows down, grains settle out of the
current, forming layers with sedimentary structures such as graded bedding and
cross-bedding. This is sort of a hybrid between a volcanic and sedimentary
process, producing what are known as volcaniclastic deposits. Another type of
deposit from this eruption was volcanic mudflows known as lahars. Lahars form
when precipitation or snowmelt mixes with loose volcanic ash to make a thick
slurry of material that may flow tens of miles away from the volcano.
YECs have used
these deposits as evidence that rapid, catastrophic processes can lay down
sediments with features that are common in Earth’s sedimentary rock record. If
MSH could create layers of rock complete with cross bedding and graded bedding
in a short amount of time, why couldn’t the entire sedimentary rock record,
many thousands of feet thick in places, have been deposited by a much larger
catastrophic event, namely Noah’s flood?
The deposits of
MSH do indeed show that volcanoes can do a lot of geologic work in a short
amount of time. It did not take the 1980 eruptions of MSH to demonstrate this,
and no geologists were taken by surprise. Any good volcanologist or
sedimentologist will be able to recognize similar volcano-associated rocks in
the rock record. Volcaniclastic rocks are common, and are thousands of feet
thick in places. Rocks in some of the northern areas of Yellowstone National
Park, as well as surrounding areas to the north, east, and southeast, are
composed largely of volcanic rocks of the Absaroka Volcanic Supergroup.
These rocks are
older than and unrelated to the volcanic rocks of the more recent Yellowstone
Caldera. The Absaroka rocks include lahars (mudflows), andesite lava flows,
pyroclastic flows, and more coarsely crystallized rocks associated with magma
chambers. By studying the flows, magma chambers, and associated dikes,
geologists have concluded that some of the volcanoes must have been
stratovolcanoes the size of the major Cascade Range volcanoes, such as Mt
Shasta or Mt Rainier.
Studying the
products of the 1980 eruption of MSH has helped geologists understand these
ancient volcanic rocks better.
How much
contribution has the study of MSH had to the understanding other types of
sedimentary rocks? Just about none. This is because most sedimentary rocks in
the geologic record are quite unlike the volcaniclastic rocks produced by
catastrophic processes at MSH. Most sandstones and conglomerates are nothing
like the deposits of MSH. Yes, many sandstones have sedimentary structures such
as cross bedding and graded bedding, but these are known to form in many
non-catastrophic settings. Other sedimentary rocks have even less resemblance
to anything associated with MSH. Most limestone is formed by biological
processes, such as the secretion of calcium carbonate shells and other hard
parts by invertebrate organisms. Most shale must have been deposited in quiet
environments, as clay does not rapidly settle out from agitated water.
Evaporite rocks (rock salt, gypsum, etc.) also have no analogs at MSH.
The conclusion
is that most rocks in the sedimentary rock record were formed by processes that
must have been quite different than what happened at MSH in 1980, and many
layers were deposited in settings that have little to do with catastrophism.
MSH tells us little about how most sedimentary rocks of the geologic rock
record originated.
MSH and the
Rapid Formation of Canyons
In addition to
depositing pyroclastic and mudflow deposits, there are erosional features
associated with eruptions of MSH. In 1982, rapid snowmelt led to severe
flooding at MSH, which carved a 100-foot deep canyon north of the gaping crater
in just a few days.
This canyon is
known informally as Step Canyon, and YECs claim it is a 1/40th scale
version of the Grand Canyon in Arizona. YECs then argue that if snowmelt at MSH
could lead to the rapid erosion of Step Canyon, then certainly the much larger
Noah’s flood could have carved the Grand Canyon in a short period of time as
well.
There are
multiple problems with this reasoning. It sounds impressive to say that there
is a 1/40th-scale version of the Grand Canyon, but this ratio is
misleading. At its deepest point, Step Canyon is a little over 100 feet deep,
which is roughly 1/40th the depth of the Grand Canyon, so
perhaps that is where YECs get that ratio. For much of its length, the Grand
Canyon ranges from 5 to 10, and up to about 18 miles wide. The canyon at MSH is
less than 0.1 miles wide, which is about 1/50th the width of
the narrower sections of the main part of the Grand Canyon. Finally, the Grand
Canyon is about 275 miles long, whereas Step Canyon at MSH is about 4 miles
long from the crater to its intersection with Engineer’s Canyon. The National
Park Service says that the volume of the
Grand Canyon is 4.17 trillion cubic meters. I made a rough estimate
that Step Canyon at MSH has a volume of about 40 million cubic meters. This
means that the volume of the rapidly formed MSH canyon is about 1/100,000th the
volume of the Grand Canyon, which is not quite as impressive to readers as
saying it is 1/40th the size.
A second
difficulty for the YEC claim is that the Grand Canyon was carved through
thousands of feet of solid rock, including crystalline metamorphic and igneous
rocks at the bottom of the canyon. Most of the erosion at Step Canyon at MSH,
on the other hand, was through unconsolidated sand and gravel. It should be
obvious that comparing erosion through sand and gravel to erosion through
schist and gneiss is comparing apples and oranges.
A final
challenge is that Step Canyon at MSH developed on a steep slope, which
facilitated rapid erosion. The average gradient of the Colorado River in the
Grand Canyon is only 8 feet per mile. Step Creek, on the other hand, drops 2300
feet in 4 miles, which is about 575 feet per mile. Erosion on a steep,
unconsolidated slope is certainly going to be far more rapid than erosion along
a low-gradient streambed in erosion-resistant rocks.
While the rapid
erosion of canyons at MSH is impressive, it falls far short of providing an
effective model for carving the giant canyons of the world in only a few
months’ time.
MSH and
Fossil Forests
The pyroclastic
flows associated with the May 18th eruption downed or burned
trees up to 19 miles (31 km) from the volcano. A large number of trees ended up
floating in Spirit Lake, where many continue to float on the lake surface forty
years later. Some of the trees are floating in a vertical position rather than
horizontally. The trees of MSH have provided a good analog for understanding
fossilized trees in some ancient volcanic deposits. The Absaroka Volcanic
Supergroup mentioned earlier contains abundant petrified trees in some areas,
such as at Specimen Ridge in Yellowstone National Park. Many of these petrified
trees are upright, which used to be interpreted as meaning that the trees were
buried where they grew. Now, largely due to studies at MSH, we understand that
trees can be ripped out of the ground, transported, and deposited in an upright
position at a distance from where they grew.
[Creationists] have
claimed that this is powerful evidence that a giant catastrophe like Noah’s
flood could have deposited the forests at Yellowstone. This is a great
overstatement. What MSH demonstrates is not that the fossil forests at places
like Yellowstone were deposited by a giant water flood, but that they were
deposited in a volcanic environment like MSH. The Absaroka rocks are clearly
volcanic in origin, with features I described earlier. These petrified trees
were transported and buried by the local catastrophes of eruptions at
stratovolcanoes, just as the trees at MSH were transported and buried by the
eruption of a volcano.
YECs also claim
that dead tree material is accumulating at the bottom of Spirit Lake at MSH,
and that this will turn into peat, which is a precursor to coal. Perhaps this
will form peat, or a peat-like deposit, but there are plenty of other
non-catastrophic environments where peat is accumulating faster than at Spirit
Lake. The world’s coal deposits as a whole, however, have little in common with
the floor of Spirit Lake, which is not a very large lake. Most coal is found in
sequences of sandstone, siltstone, and shale that give every appearance of
being swampy environments such as river floodplains or deltas. The closest
thing to a catastrophe in these environments would be a normal flood or channel
migration. No MSH-sized catastrophe is needed.
MSH and the
Bible
As an old-Earth
Christian, I accept the Bible as the trustworthy and authoritative Word of God.
I not only
believe that God created the universe from nothing, I believe that Noah’s flood
was a real, historic event. I do not accept the idea that the story of Noah is
some sort of inspired myth, but that it really happened.
YECs claim that
MSH helps “prove” that a global Noah’s flood really occurred, and that the
Bible is true. I think this effort is misguided for three general reasons. The
first of these is that, like many inerrancy-affirming Old Testament scholars,
pastors, and scientists, I am not convinced that Genesis 6-9 even requires a
global flood like the YECs envision. Entire books have been written on this
subject, but the case for some sort of local (though still large) flood can be
summarized as 1. The story is told from the perspective of Noah on Earth’s
surface, not in orbit around spheroidal planet (which the Hebrews may have had
no concept of), 2. The vocabulary in the flood account is
more ambiguous in Hebrew than it is in our English-language translations, and
3. Universal language in the Old Testament is frequently hyperbolic. In other
words, “all the earth” seldom literally means “all the earth” in
the Old Testament.
A second reason
why I do not think all these YEC attempts to explain Earth history are valid is
that the flood account in Genesis tells us nothing about the geological work of
Noah’s flood. The Bible makes no claims about the origin of sedimentary, igneous,
or metamorphic rocks. It makes no claims about the origin of the fossil record.
It makes no claims about the eruptions of stratovolcanoes, the carving of
canyons large or small, or the deposition of fossil forests. The entire YEC
flood geology story, exemplified by their claims about MSH or the Grand Canyon,
is built on extrapolations from the text of Genesis, rather than on actual
exegesis of the text.
Finally, YEC
flood geology does not provide a credible model for explaining the origin of
features of Earth’s crust. I have shown that the eruption of MSH tells us
little or nothing about the origin of sedimentary rock layers, canyons, or
fossil forests. Most sedimentary rocks are nothing like deposits formed by
volcanic eruptions, the canyons at MSH do not demonstrate that Earth’s large
canyons could have formed quickly, and MSH provides a model for petrified
forests in volcaniclastic rocks, but not much else.
What claims
does the Bible make about the work of Noah’s flood? None, really. The
truthfulness of the Bible does not depend on whether or not MSH provides a
model for Noah’s flood. In reality, MSH provides a model for understanding
certain ancient volcanic eruptions, but not much else. YEC claims about MSH and
the Noah’s flood are based on unwarranted extrapolations from the text of
Genesis rather than exegesis of the text of Genesis.
Grace and Peace
©2020 Kevin
Nelstead, GeoChristian.com

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