How Fossil Frogs got Croaked

Like other fossils, several dozen frogs were found in sedimentary layers. This time, the fossil discovery was in Germany. They were in the Geiseltal biota, which contains a prairie schooner-full of fossils, both vertebrates and invertebrates.

This formation is known for having excellent preservation, which includes skeletons and soft tissues. (Interesting that soft tissues are becoming more common, but the threat to deep time and the affirmation of the Genesis Flood are ignored.) Researchers tried to explain the frog fossils.

Scientists found dozens of frog fossils, but could not figured out how they died, so they made a bad guess. The real evidence is found in the Genesis Flood.
Frogs mating in water, Unsplash / Radek Homola

Darwinists cannot figure what made all those frogs croak. (They also have no explanation why there is no evolution in the fossil record; frogs have always been frogs.) Several ideas were offered as to why they joined the choir invisible, but none were compelling. They decided on the best of the worst, that they died while making more frogs.

Well, some frogs today mate in water, and the females sometimes drown. So, all of those frogs drowned during mating, males and females? That'll be the day. Actually, there's a passel of evidence supporting their demise in the Genesis Flood. That's anathema to secularists.

Evolutionary scientists recently studied 168 frog fossils from central Germany, concluding that the frogs all drowned while aggressively mating. They claim to have arrived at this preposterous assertion by the process of elimination. Unfortunately, the catastrophic burial of the frogs in the global Flood, the most obvious answer, was never considered.

Hop over to "Copulation Didn't Kill the Frogs, the Flood Did" to read the rest.