Again, terribly sorry for being about 12 hours out of the loop, but such is the nature of work and the
World Wide Web.
...would come close to what we see today.
I've never seen
liquefaction mentioned by any of the creationists I've debated over the years because most of those I have encountered argued Henry Morris'
"hydrological sorting" hypothesis.
Both are terribly problematic when it comes to the fossil record. As EJArmstrong noted above, geology as a practicable science would be utterly impossible - and hydrocarbon exploration (oil, coal and natural gas) would be folly - if we could not make reliable determinations of fossil (again using the term in it's broadest sense) that we could find in certain locations in strata thought to be of a certain geological age. This applies to sandstone, dolomite, oil, coal, basalt, diamonds, chalk, salt and even special cases like
the search for Tiktaalik, in which case paleontologists knew to seach Ellesmere Island because it had Devonian strata and it was predicted that strata would contain fish to terrestrial tetrapod tranistionals.
That's a deathblow for liquifaction and becomes even more problematic when we move beyond microfossils into body and trace fossils when it comes to hydrological sorting. It's also an irony that most Creationists just ignore or try and excuse away that if we found fossils in strata consistent with hydrological sorting it would be the demise of evolutionary theory.
The fact is though, that we never find trouts and trilobites in the same strata. Hydrological sorting says we should. We never find crows and
Confuciusornis in the same strata. Hydrological sorting says we should. We never find rabbits and
Dimetrodons in the same strata. We never find lobsters and Ammonites in the same strata. We never find rhinos and triceratops in the same strata. The list of potentially falsifying discoveries we could make for evolutionary theory and evidentiary for Creationism is nearly endless.
And yet, we never make those discoveries...
So here's were microfossils ties back in with hydrological sorting again - remember how I noted that fossils aren't found in vacuums? We never find pollen or fossils of pollen bearing plants in strata that predate the
Devonian. If the hydrological sorting hypothesis suggests or beings like plants that couldn't run should be all over the geological column, why isn't pollen or fossils of pollen bearing plants in all strata?