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Dinosaur bones prove creationism right, man says

The Australian man building a Noah’s ark in America has defied his critics again, unveiling a dinosaur fossil named “Ebenezer” he says proves humans lived alongside dinosaurs.

Ken Ham, the founder of the Creation Museum in Kentucky, will be unveiling a new exhibit of a 30-foot-long skeleton of an Allosaurus on Saturday.

The fossil resembles a Tyrannosaurus rex and is the centerpiece of a new exhibit called “Facing the Allosaurus”.

Creation Museum head Ken Ham, right, speaks during a debate on evolution with TV’s “Science Guy” Bill Nye, at the Creation Museum Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2014, in Petersburg, Ky.AP
According to Answers in Genesis, the Christian ministry that owns the museum, 50 per cent of the skeleton’s bones were recovered when it was found in Colorado over a decade ago.

Keeping with its Bible-themed approach, the Creation Museum says the dinosaur died in a worldwide flood about 4,300 years ago. However, scientists say the last dinosaurs roamed the earth more than 60 million years ago.

Mr. Ham, who gained notoriety for his $80 million plan to build an ark, and a high-profile evolution debate with science educator Bill Nye, said the new exhibit “will help us defend the book of Genesis and expose the scientific problems with evolution”.

“Evolutionists use dinosaurs to reach children more than anything to promote their worldview,” the former Queensland science teacher said. “Our museum uses dinosaurs to help tell their true history according to the Bible.”

Mr. Ham’s debate with Nye in February drew millions of viewers and intense national media attention.

Nye challenged the biblical story by describing how animals would have behaved during such a flood event, citing the fossil layers at the Grand Canyon as an example.

Nye said if “there was a big flood on the earth, you would expect drowning animals to swim up to a higher level,” which would mean their bones would be mingled with fossils known to be from a later time period. “Not any one of them did, not a single one.”

Daniel Phelps, president of the Kentucky Paleontological Society, said in a release Thursday that the Creation Museum “has decided, without doing research, that the dinosaur fossil is evidence of Noah’s flood.”

A 35-foot long allosaurus exhibit at the Dinosaur National Monument in Vernal, Utah.AP
The Allosaurus, named Ebenezer, was donated to the museum by the Elizabeth Streb Peroutka Foundation, which purchased the bones over a decade ago.

Michael Peroutka, a member of the foundation and the Constitution Party’s candidate for president in 2004, said the fossil “is a testimony to the creative power of God in designing dinosaurs, and … it also lends evidence to the truth of a worldwide catastrophic flooding of the earth in Noah’s time.”

But according to Mark Clementz, a paleontologist at the University of Wyoming, the Allosaurus was a large carnivore that lived in North America during the late Jurassic period about 150 million years ago.

This story originally appeared on News.com.au.