"Grasslands limited". This is a microcosm of circular reasoning in two words. Whenever the remains of a grassland habitat is found fossilized it's assigned to something other than the Eocene.
Magnoliaceae, Lauraceae and Juglandaceae
"Angiosperms having affinities with Magnoliaceae, Lauraceae, Juglandaceae". This may seem random but it's nuanced evolution narrative, you just have to know something about the development of Angiosperms.
Angiosperms Rise to Dominance
This is narrative that's designed to establish the evolution premise that the Angiosperms are the most developmentally advanced kinds of plants, and so therefore have the most recent origin.
Extensive Inundation of Continents
"Extensive inundation of continents" is letting us know that this was part of a world-wide flood. The inundation is the second phase of Noah's flood.
Dinosaurs Abundant
According to our compilation of doublespeak terms used in Paleobotany and Paleontology "abundant" is a euphemism for eradication. That's what Jurassic sediments preserve: the eradication of dinosaurs.
Rise of Higher Insects and Birds
"Rise of higher insects and birds" is an example of Paleodoublespeak. Jurassic sediment contains the preserved remains of dead insects and birds. That's not evidence of their rise. It's evidence of their extinction.
Highly Similar Plant Communities
Statements that the Earth had a uniform equable climate during geological periods are a little misleading. Sediments are assigned to periods based on their flora and fauna, to it's just a little microcosm of circular reasoning.
Late Triassic Wildfires
What really matters in the popular science narrative of godless existence (SciPop). Location, location, location. Were forest fires an extinction event at the end of the Triassic? Or did a few burned trees get fossilized?
First Mammals; Rise of the Dinosaurs
First mammals? A place where mammals were buried doesn't make them the first mammals. The presence of mammal remains in sediment is used to place the sediment in timeline of the evolution narrative.
Rise of the Cycadophytes, Ginkgoales
The Triassic wasn't rise of the cycadophytes and Ginkgoales, it's the preserved remains of cycadophytes and Ginkgoales because their habitat was destroyed and buried in a world-wide flood. That's Paleodoublespeak.
