05/27/2026
HIGH IN THE HIMALAYAS, FOLDED ROCK AND EVIDENCE OF A MASSIVE FLOOD
In Zangla within the Tethyan, Himalayas, entire layers of rock that were once flat and part of the sea floor, are now folded, overturned, and even standing vertical. These are not small bends. These are massive sheets of crust crumpled and stacked over one another.
Geology describes this as compression between tectonic plates. Layers detach, slide, and stack into what are called nappes. As pressure increases, those layers tilt higher and higher until they reach steep angles. The mountain belt widens. Rock is forced outward. The structure becomes complex and violent in its deformation.
Now think of it this way.
If two cars roll into each other slowly at 1 mph, nothing happens. No crumpling. No folding. Just contact.
But if those same cars collide at high speed say 100 mph, metal bends, folds, and stacks. The shape changes instantly because of the force involved.
That is what these rocks look like.
If the earth’s crust were moving at today’s slow rates over long ages, you would not expect this level of intense folding and large-scale transport. But if those layers were laid down rapidly, still saturated, not yet hardened, and then compressed violently, they would bend, fold, and stack exactly like this.
Soft material folds. Hardened rock fractures.
Yet here we see sweeping folds, detached layers carried long distances, and structures that show bending on a massive scale. That points to deformation while the material was still pliable.
This is also many thousands of feet high. It took a lot of force to do this.
The Bible describes a global Flood where the earth was broken up, waters surged, and the surface was reshaped. That kind of catastrophic event provides the conditions for rapid deposition followed by powerful compression.
What you are looking at is not slow, quiet change.
It is the result of force applied at scale.
The mountains are not just rising.
They are the aftermath of a collision