Difference between revisions of "Catastrophism"
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− | the belief that the fossil forms represented in each layer of the earth were destroyed by a catastrophic event and that the next set of plants and animals represented a new creation event and were organisms that survived the catastrophe. | + | * anthropology |
− | + | # the belief that the fossil forms represented in each layer of the earth were destroyed by a catastrophic event and that the next set of plants and animals represented a new creation event and were organisms that survived the catastrophe. <br/>Source: Anthromorphemics | |
− | Source: Anthromorphemics | + | * geology |
+ | # The hypothesis that a series of immense, brief, worldwide upheavals changed the Earth's crust greatly and can account for the development of mountains, valleys, and other features of the Earth. See also [[uniformitarianism]]. | ||
[[Category: Anthropology]] | [[Category: Anthropology]] |
Revision as of 12:49, 4 November 2021
- anthropology
- the belief that the fossil forms represented in each layer of the earth were destroyed by a catastrophic event and that the next set of plants and animals represented a new creation event and were organisms that survived the catastrophe.
Source: Anthromorphemics
- geology
- The hypothesis that a series of immense, brief, worldwide upheavals changed the Earth's crust greatly and can account for the development of mountains, valleys, and other features of the Earth. See also uniformitarianism.
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