Relative to the "growing earth" theory, write-ins have asked for a clarification on this subject… that if the Earth were smaller… that in the dinosauric past wouldn't all the waters in the present oceans cover all the land in the past…. Or if  there were shallow seas ONLY in the past… how then is there so much water that it now fills the oceans of this much bigger earth.

The answer of course is that if the Earth grew, the whole Earth, all elements were created in the same proportions as now (inside the Earth.)

If you "get" or understand the basic concept that Earth had to make mass (stuff) to get to THIS present size you have to ask what "STUFF" was made. Sensibly all the same stuff that "was made" to give us the earlier smaller Earth is the same stuff, solids and gasses that gives us the mass for this now bigger Earth.

The same proportion of iron, oxygen, hydrogen, copper, tin, silicate rock, basalts, and so on.

Imagine an Earth's core like you  see in a geode. (You know, those round stones that when you cut them in half and look inside you see beautiful crystals seemingly growing inward.) in the very middle, it's empty, because the crystals are, in reality, growing and pushing outward!

That's very much like the Earth (only prettier) the core area (except for the very middle) is filled with plasma (according to this theory) in which flows the intense electromagnetic field of the Earth.

Matter is created (google Carl David Anderson) from the prime matter (or aether, or dark matter, or, call it, pre-matter) that fills the universe.

Positron and electron pairs are produced which follow the electromagnetic lines isolated from each other… until the positrons gather neutral mass (prime matter) sufficient to become protons.

Those join to become hydrogen…

Then the same process that happens in the sun and its solar system happens. Hydrogen atoms are compressed into neutrons. Helium is produced. The "inner core" strips the electrons from the helium.

The helium ions join to make higher count atoms all of which fall to the inner surface of the mantle.

The minerals, silicates, irons, manganese, etc.. etc.., in gas form, work up into the mantle… until they fine a place to join, in silicate bonds.

Sorry to get complicated… the point is the newly produced gasses easily rise up through the fissures and crystal lattices of the silicate, to the surface.

These gasses, including hydrogen and oxygen erupt throughout the surface through the 80,000 miles of rifts deep in the oceans all around the world. (There are over 30 other spots around the world where gasses escape into our atmosphere.)

This is where all that water we were talking about came from.

Some escapes into space but as a growing Earth's gravity increases, less escapes. (On Jupiter, none escapes.)

Constantly renewed…. Water… the shallow seas that were once on the continental plates?

Drained now, into the new rifted open oceans. Gone entirely from the upper plates (no sign of them… well except most of these seas are great places for compressive folding… that you can call mountaining. In that case you will find the signs of some of these shallow seas at the tops of mountains. Pretty incredible, huh.