Dinosaur National Monument and the Genesis Flood

Interesting how the western part of America has so many things of interest to geology and paleontology, yes? Lots of national parks and national monuments protected by the government. Most are quite large. Dinosaur National Monument spans parts of two states, Utah and Colorado.

This national monument appears in science news frequently, especially because of dinosaurs. Obviously. There is also some interesting geology. That and geology bring along deep time propaganda. Someone can also go camping, river rafting, hiking, and things.

Hiker at Dinosaur National Monument, NPS / Jacob W. Frank (usage does not imply endorsement of site contents)
The uniformitarian narrative has rocks building up over hundreds of millions of years. Slowly. The Morrison Formation contains the dinosaurs, and they say it is 150 million years old. The story of how the fossils formed is out of kilter with the usual tale. There are details of what is actually observed with the fossils and the rocks that are far better explained by the Genesis Flood.
Straddling the border of Utah and Colorado, Dinosaur National Monument (DNM) is one of the richest exposures of dinosaur fossils in the world. But not just dinosaurs are on display. DNM also contains equally breathtaking rock exposures and sheer canyons.

To learn something new...old...keep reading at "Dinosaur National Monument: Fossil Graveyard of the Flood."