We might not expect to find fish fossils in the Sahara Desert, but recently researchers dug up a 2-metre (6.5 ft.) long catfish in Wadi Al-Hitan, southwest of Cairo.
It is roughly the same size as today’s largest catfish.
The creature is assumed to be “37 million years” old. Clearly a catfish, it was named Qarmoutus hitanensis.
Evolutionists believe that Sahara was once covered with water. We would agree, although they tend to give inflated dates.
The catfish fossil is not the only evidence for Noah’s Flood in the Sahara. The Aloba Arch in Chad, an imposing natural formation, also looks like it was carved by huge amounts of water.
Source:
Drake, Nadia. 2017. Giant Catfish Fossil Found in Egyptian Desert.National Geographic (10 March).