If you take a great notion to head south — way, way south past Australia — you will encounter Antarctica. No country owns it, but there are named regions. It is primarily used for scientific research. A notable curiosity on Taylor Glacier is Blood Falls.
People who played the violent (but unremarkable graphics by today's standards) game Doom II may remember a map called Bloodfalls. The one in Antarctica exists and was given its name because the water does indeed look like blood. It is flowing because it has salt. Lots of salt.
Interestingly, Wickedpedia is yet again promoting deep time and evolution, so
their article on Blood Falls includes some contradictory remarks. The red color is due to iron oxides. There is an ecosystem of microbes living in it that don't care that the area has no oxygen to speak of. The article mentions a "poorly understood interaction" relating to sulphur and iron biochemical cycles.
Then it goes on to mention "
Snowball Earth" which is desperate, silly, and disputed among secularists.
More intriguing is that the Wikipedia article mentions implications for astrobiology. (That is really a non-existent science, because there are no astros to biologize. That is, there are no extraterrestrials to study.) What I want all y'all to notice is that a "poorly understood interaction" is still used to promote abiogenesis and life evolving elsewhere in the universe.
Secularists have antipathy toward the Genesis Flood, one reason being that it gives evidence for the young earth. More importantly, though, is that the Flood was a judgment on sinful humanity. The final Judgment is coming. The author of the article featured below points out the judgment of the Flood and also speaks of symbolism that can be assigned to Blood Falls. Since the article is extremely short, I am not going to give a preview.
Kindly read it by going to "Crimson Cascade."