A New Ankylosaur and the Genesis Flood

Off the southern edge of England, in the English Channel, lies the Isle of Wight. It is known for landscapes, chalk, and geological features, so the locals were probably not overly surprised to learn that a new ankylosaur was discovered there.

Ankylosaurs were herbivores. These critters looked like turtles gone wrong, what with all that armor and all. One curiosity is that they are usually found fossilized on their backs. Also, like other creatures of that time, evolution is assumed but there is no evidence of it.

On the Isle of Wight in the English Channel, scientists found a new ankylosaur. Secularists are puzzled by the way it was buried in sediment.
Edmontonia rugosidens, Wikimedia Commons / Mariana Ruiz (PD)
The way they were buried in sediment is a curiosity to secular scientists, and they have some ideas that do not pass the sniff test. So many ankylosaurs were clumsy, fell into rivers and floated out to sea where they were buried? This child lacks belief that such an idea is plausible. Indeed, the more reasonable explanation (although streng verboten among Darwin's acolytes) is the mechanisms of the global Genesis Flood.
Ankylosaurs are herbivorous dinosaurs found in flood rocks. They are classified in the reptilian order of Ornithischia or “bird-hipped” (having a hip design with ischium and pubis bones lying parallel and next to each other).

Their design is unique, with large and small bony shields (bony osteoderms) embedded in their skin and covering their sides and back. . . All told, these dinosaurs looked something like a walking tank.

. . .

In 2023, a group of evolutionists described “a new genus and species of ankylosaur [Vectipelta barrette] from the Wessex Formation of the Isle of Wight” in England. Vectipelta has some unique traits such as “numerous postcranial autapomorphies,” but it is still 100% an ankylosaur.

You can read the entire article by visiting "New Ankylosaur Discovery."