Ian Juby recently sent me his Creation Evolution News for April 14, 2010. (See April 14, 2010 CrEvo newsletter) I asked him for permission to post his Dinosaur Discombobulation pictures on a forum. He said that it was fine. Here are discombobulated dinosaurs in the Morrison Formation, Dinosaur National Monument, Utah When we find dinosaurs, we find them in one of two ways: ripped apart and scattered, or we find them in the death pose. In either case, we find them buried with marine organisms. In fact, the Morrison formation (which I am the most familiar with, having excavated in it, and examined it in multiple locations and multiple times) provides a stunning example of the evidence of Noah's flood. When you visit Dinosaur National Monument (an exposition of the dinosaur bones in-situ in the Morrison formation), you'll encounter a plaque which reads "Clams, not dinosaurs, are the most abundant fossils found here." In fact, the fossil clams they have on display were buried alive in the closed position. In fact, plaques at Dinosaur National Monument and the Royal Tyrell Museum in Drumheller, Alberta, both state quite plainly that it was a flood that killed and discombobulated these dinosaurs in the beds. So even the evolutionary community acknowledges that it was a flash flood that killed and disarticulated (discombobulated, or tore apart) the dinosaurs of the Morrison formation. Bury a clam and it will escape - unless you bury it fast and deep so that it can't dig its way out again. At Dinosaur National Monument, and the Royal Tyrell Museum in Drumheller, Alberta, they claim that these dinosaurs were buried by a river. First of all, rivers do not bury clams alive. Secondly, this was no meandering river! This is a map of the Morrison formation: The Morrison covers ten states and three Canadian provinces. That layer is typically parallel to the other layers above and below it, showing that all those layers were laid down by the same event. Most of the formation is 4,000 to 8,000 feet above sea level today. A global scale flood laid down the Morrison formation and buried these dinosaurs.