Dr. Carl E. Baugh, director of the Creation Evidence Museum, joins Art Bell to discuss creation evidence, a hyperbaric biosphere, and human-dinosaur coexistence after a cattle-mutilation letter. Art reads a listener account of six mutilated calves found in Idaho, stripped of skin and organs with no blood present, followed by unidentified men in a white van who confiscated photographs and removed the carcasses.
Baugh explains that doubled atmospheric pressure and enhanced electromagnetic fields would have tripled oxygen absorption into blood plasma, allowing dinosaurs with small lungs to thrive. In experiments, fruit flies under these conditions tripled their adult lifespan in just the second generation, a result he believes would translate to 200-year human lifespans.
Baugh presents evidence for recent human-dinosaur coexistence, including Anasazi rock carvings depicting sauropod dinosaurs and Peruvian burial stones showing detailed dermal patterns later confirmed by European fossil discoveries. He argues that the decay rate of Earth's magnetic field, measured since 1829, makes any timeline beyond 20,000 years physically impossible for sustaining molecular life.