• author
    What about the Dinosaurs?

This frequent question, asked in just this way, implies many questions related to dinosaurs, a word meaning "terrible lizards." When did they live? What killed the dinosaurs? What were they like? What does the Bible say about them? Could the Ark have held so many large animals? Why are their bones and fossils found inside Antarctica and the Arctic Circle—unlivable places, too cold and lacking food?

There were about 500 different types of dinosaurs. Most were large; some even gigantic. One adult dinosaur was as tall as a five-story building. However, some adults were small, about the size of a chicken. [See page 466.] Most evolutionists now say that birds are dinosaurs.

Many questions will be answered if we focus on one question, "When did they live?" Two quite different answers are usually given. Evolutionists say that dinosaurs lived, died, and became extinct at least 60-million years before man evolved. Others believe God created all living things during the creation week, so man and dinosaurs lived at the same time. If we look at the evidence, sorting out these two very different answers should be easy.

Did dinosaurs become extinct at least 60-million years before man evolved? Almost all textbooks that address the subject say they did. Movies and television vividly portray this. One hears it even at Disney World and other amusement parks. Some will say that every educated person believes this. We frequently hear stories that begin with impressive-sounding phrases such as, "Two hundred million years ago, when dinosaurs ruled the earth, …" But none of this is evidence; some of it is an appeal to authority. Evidence must be observable and verifiable.

Did man and dinosaurs live at the same time? Scientists in the former Soviet Union have reported a layer of rock containing more than 2,000 dinosaur footprints alongside tracks "resembling human footprints." 1 Obviously, both types of footprints were made in mud or sand that later hardened into rock. If some are human footprints, then man and dinosaurs lived at the same time. Similar discoveries have been made in Arizona. 2 Were it not for the theory of evolution, few would doubt that these were human footprints.

Soft dinosaur tissue has now been recovered from several dinosaurs: three tyrannosaurs (T. Rex) and one hadrosaur. It is ridiculous to believe that soft tissue can be preserved for 60,000,000 years, but it could be preserved since the flood, about 5,000 years ago. [For details see "Old DNA, Bacteria, Proteins, and Soft Tissue?" on page 38.]

The Book of Job is one of the oldest books ever written. In it, God tells of His greatness as Creator and describes an animal, called Behemoth, as follows:
Behold now, Behemoth, which I made as well as you; He eats grass like an ox. Behold now, his strength in his loins, And his power in the muscles of his belly. He bends his tail like a cedar; The sinews of his thighs are knit together. His bones are tubes of bronze; His limbs are like bars of iron. (Job 40:15–18)

Marginal notes in many Bibles speculate that Behemoth was probably an elephant or a hippopotamus, but those animals have tails like ropes. Behemoth had a "tail like a cedar." Any animal with a tail as huge and strong as a cedar tree is probably a dinosaur. Also, Job 40:19–24 says this giant, difficult-to-capture animal was not alarmed by a raging river. If the writer of Job knew of a dinosaur, then the evolution position is wrong, and man saw dinosaurs.

The next chapter of Job (Job 41) describes another huge, fierce animal, a sea monster named Leviathan. It was not a whale or crocodile, because the Hebrew language had other words to describe such animals. Leviathan may be a plesiosaur (PLEE-see-uh-sore), a large seagoing reptile that evolutionists say became extinct 60-million years before man evolved. Other ancient writing describe Behemoth and Leviathan. 3

For the past three centuries, reports have come from the Congo in western Africa that dinosaurs exist in remote swamps. These eyewitness stories are often from educated people who can quickly describe dinosaurs. Two expeditions to the Congo, led by biologist Dr. Roy Mackal of the University of Chicago, never saw dinosaurs, but interviewed many of these witnesses and concluded that their reports were about dinosaurs and were apparently true. 4 If any of these accounts are correct, man and dinosaurs were contemporaries.

Consider the many dragon legends. Most ancient cultures have stories or artwork of dragons that strongly resemble dinosaurs. 5 The World Book Encyclopedia states that:
The dragons of legend are strangely like actual creatures that have lived in the past. They are much like the great reptiles [dinosaurs] which inhabited the earth long before man is supposed to have appeared on earth. Dragons were generally evil and destructive. Every country had them in its mythology. 6
The simplest and most obvious explanation for so many common descriptions of dragons from around the world is that man once knew the dinosaurs.

What caused the extinction of dinosaurs? Primarily, the flood. Because dinosaur bones are found among other fossils, dinosaurs must have been living when the flood began. Dozens of other dinosaur extinction theories exist, but all have recognized problems. [See pages 122–123.] Most of the food chain was buried in the flood. Therefore, many large dinosaurs that survived the flood probably had difficulty feeding themselves and became extinct.

One of the least acknowledged dinosaur mysteries is the discovery of their fossils and bones inside the Arctic Circle and in Antarctica 7 — places where they shouldn’t have been able to live. That mystery is solved when one understands why the earth slowly rolled 34°–57° after the flood. [See "Earth Roll" on page 136.]

Were dinosaurs on the Ark? Yes. God told Noah to put representatives of every kind of land animal on the Ark. (Some dinosaurs were semiaquatic and could have survived outside the Ark.) But why put adult dinosaurs on the Ark? Young dinosaurs would take up less room, eat less, and be easier to manage. Animals were on board so they could reproduce after the flood and repopulate the earth. Young dinosaurs would have more potential for reproduction than old dinosaurs.

Bones of certain dinosaurs show annual growth rings, as trees do. Those dinosaurs, early in life and late in life, grew very slowly. During mid-life, they had large growth spurts. 8 Therefore, their juveniles, during the year they were on the Ark, probably weighed less than 60 pounds. (A 2-year-old T. Rex weighed 66 pounds. The largest known T. Rex lived to the age of 28 years. Dinosaurs did not become large because they lived long lives.)

References and Notes

1.
Alexander Romashko, "Tracking Dinosaurs," Moscow News, No. 24, 1983, p. 10.
2.
Paul O. Rosnau et al., "Are Human and Mammal Tracks Found Together with the Tracks of Dinosaurs in the Kayenta of Arizona?" Parts I and II, Creation Research Society Quarterly; Vol. 26, September 1989, pp. 41–48 and December 1989, pp. 77–98.

◆ Before 1986, the film, Footprints in Stone, and John Morris’ book, Tracking Those Incredible Dinosaurs, popularized the idea that dinosaur tracks and human tracks were together along the banks of the Paluxy River, near Glen Rose, Texas. Later, it was learned that a particular dinosaur made those tracks when it was walking uphill. Because of these errors, the film and book are no longer distributed. A few creationists still claim that some of these manlike tracks were made by humans. I believe that the Paluxy tracks should be studied more and many questions satisfactorily answered before claiming human tracks are along the Paluxy River.

◆ In Uzbekistan, 86 consecutive horse hoofprints were found beside supposedly 90–100-million-year-old dinosaur tracks. Evolutionists have almost as much difficulty believing that horses and dinosaurs lived together as they do man and dinosaurs. Horses allegedly did not evolve until many millions of years after the dinosaurs became extinct. [See Y. Kruzhilin and V. Ovcharov, "A Horse from the Dinosaur Epoch?" Moskovskaya Pravda (Moscow Truth), 5 February 1984.]
3.
Psalms 74:14 and 104:26, and Isaiah 27:1 mention Leviathan. Both Leviathan and Behemoth are described in the apocryphal book II Esdras. Both were given separate territories because of their large size.
Then you set apart two creatures: one you called Behemoth and the other Leviathan. You put them in separate places, for the seventh part where the water was collected was not big enough to hold them both. A part of the land which was made dry on the third day you gave to Behemoth as his territory, a country of a thousand hills. II Esdras 6:49–52
4.
Roy P. Mackal, A Living Dinosaur? (New York: E. J. Brill, 1987).

◆ "Living Dinosaurs?" Science 80, November 1980, pp. 6–7.

◆ Jamie James, "Bigfoot or Bust," Discover, March 1988, pp. 44–53.

5.
Lorella Rouster, "The Footprints of Dragons," Creation Social Science and Humanities Quarterly, Fall 1978, pp. 23–28.
6.
Knox Wilson, "Dragon," The World Book Encyclopedia, Vol. 5, 1973, p. 265.
7.
"First record of a sauropod dinosaur in Antarctica suggests more widespread distribution of this species than previously thought. ... Other important dinosaur discoveries have been made in Antarctica in the last two decades—principally in the James Ross Basin." Joan Robinson, "Plant-Eating Dinosaur Discovered in Antarctica," 19 December 2011, Naturwissenschaften, www.springer.com/about springer/media/ springer+select?SGWID=0-11001-6-1321221-0.
8.
Gregory M. Erickson et al., "Gigantism and Comparative Life-History Parameters of Tyrannosaurid Dinosaurs," Nature, Vol. 430, 12 August 2004, pp. 772-775.

Article taken from "Frequently Asked Questions", page 495-496, "In the Beginning: Compelling Evidence for Creation and the Flood, 9th edition, (c) 2019 by Walt Brown. All rights reserved." - View