Dr. Tim Clarey from the Institute for Creation Research (www.ICR.org) has studied over 1,500 stratigraphic columns across North and South America and Africa that have revealed the progression of Noah’s flood from marine to land sequences in what are known as “Sloss-type megasequences.” The three earliest megasequences, Sauk, Tippecanoe and Kaskaskia, contain almost exclusively marine fossils, indicating the action of the Flood beginning with the “Fountains of the great deep” as described in Genesis 7:11. The Fourth megasequence (Absaroka) includes a massive increase in global coverage and volume and includes the first major plant and terrestrial animal fossils. The Fifth megasequence (Zuni) reveals the highest water point of the Flood (or “Zenith” at Day 150 of the 371-day Flood process) and shows the maximum global volume of sediment coverage compared to all earlier megasequences. The final megasequence (Tejas) exhibits fossils indicative of the highest upland areas of the pre-Flood world. Its rocks document a major shift in direction reflective of the receding water phase of the Flood. Read a detailed discussion here: https://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1036&context=icc_proceedings Watch the videos below for more: