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Dinosaur skin rapid fossilization
Normally, when an animal dies it decays quickly—the skin decays and the bones
fall apart, or disarticulate. Finding fossilized 'soft tissue' such as skin
implies very rapid burial—before it decayed. Describing a duck-billed dinosaur
unearthed in South Dakota. One researcher said, 'You can see the individual
scales ... Because of the presence of skin and the complete articulation of the
animal it was obviously not killed and it was obviously not scavenged.' A
worldwide flood would rapidly bury animals—and rapidly buried animals (not
buried slowly) are exactly what we see in the fossil record.
Video
11 Apr, 201200:48