Makoshika State Park and the Genesis Flood

If you mount up and ride out Montana way and look near Glendive, you will come across Makoshika State Park. It takes up an impressive 11,538 acres and does the usual state park things like camping, hiking, hunting, and so on. 

Makoshika also has activities that they call educational because it is a part of a massive playground of paleontologists, the Hell Creek Formation. That means dinosaur bones and fossils. There is a wagon trainload of them for study and for secularists to evosplain the demise of dinosaurs.

Rock formation in Makoshika State Park, Wikimedia Commons / Larry D. Moore (CC BY 4.0)
Storytellers commence chattering about the Chicxulub impact by a big rock from space and how it was responsible for dinosaur extinction. That story is unraveling. Also, dinosaur blood vessel grooves and other things are still in existence, but should not exist in the conventional deep time narrative. If secularists stripped away evolutionary presuppositions, they could examine the evidence and see that the Genesis Flood models of creation science offer far more plausible explanations.
Makoshika State Park, located just southeast of Glendive, Montana, became a state park in 1939. Its badlands feature steepsided, rugged terrain carved from rock strata by extensive erosion. In fact, the park gets its name from the Lakota term mako sica, meaning “bad land.”

These lands expose the Hell Creek Formation—a loosely cemented sandstone containing many dinosaur fossils. The layers found here reveal a variety of features that challenge conventional theories about evolution, dinosaur extinction, and ancient ages. They instead support a historical catastrophic flood like the one recorded in Genesis.

To keep reading, head on over to "Makoshika State Park: Dinosaur Myths and Wonders."