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Author Topic:   the ultimate question
Joe Meert
Member (Idle past 5707 days)
Posts: 913
From: Gainesville
Joined: 03-02-2002


Message 31 of 59 (9764)
05-16-2002 2:38 AM
Reply to: Message 30 by Tranquility Base
05-16-2002 2:24 AM


quote:
Originally posted by Tranquility Base:
[b]That may be all true Joe, but models start rough and then home in. We'll see whether it really is ruled out. At the end of the day I am scientifically satisfied that there is a potential solution and that I understand most of the major points of the differences in the two viewpoints.[/QUOTE]
JM: Yet, you admit this is not your arena of expertise. So be it. You are more convinced by the religious arguments than the scientific ones. How do I know this? Because none of the scientific arguments are published!
quote:
I certainly can't argue detailed geophysics with you but I can certainly ask you what your opinion of this or that creationist theory is. And I am still satisfied that accelerated decay could cause the flood in some way and be consistent with the data.
JM: Nor could I strongly argue your expertise. However, accelerated decay as a mechanism for a global flood is nonsensical mumbo-jumbo. Perhaps your religious fervor has biased your scientific mind?
[QUOTE] It's not much differenet tha nDarwin - he didn't even know about genes and yet he somehow hoped evoltuon could happen somehow. Empirically he 'knew' it must. Well, 'emperically' I think the geological column looks like a flood deposit and so do my flood geolgoist friends. I particularly like cyclothems but I'll inundate you with that another day.
[/b]
JM: You do not have to inundate me with cylcothems! They are actually irrelevant to the discussion. Empirically, creationists dismissed the flood 150+ years ago and their evidence damning the Noachian flood is still valid. I've yet to see you answer my questions other than to say (in essence) "The bible can be interpreted to say it and that settles it for me"---until I need to reinterpret it!
Cheers
Joe Meert

This message is a reply to:
 Message 30 by Tranquility Base, posted 05-16-2002 2:24 AM Tranquility Base has not replied

  
Tranquility Base
Inactive Member


Message 32 of 59 (9767)
05-16-2002 2:47 AM


^ I thought I said that I also found the ICR and AIG creationists arguements compelling.
------------------
You are go for TLI

Replies to this message:
 Message 33 by Joe Meert, posted 05-16-2002 3:20 AM Tranquility Base has not replied

  
Joe Meert
Member (Idle past 5707 days)
Posts: 913
From: Gainesville
Joined: 03-02-2002


Message 33 of 59 (9769)
05-16-2002 3:20 AM
Reply to: Message 32 by Tranquility Base
05-16-2002 2:47 AM


quote:
Originally posted by Tranquility Base:
^ I thought I said that I also found the ICR and AIG creationists arguements compelling.

Unpublished nonsense. Can you supply some scientifically published research to support your case?
Cheers
Joe Meert

This message is a reply to:
 Message 32 by Tranquility Base, posted 05-16-2002 2:47 AM Tranquility Base has not replied

  
Tranquility Base
Inactive Member


Message 34 of 59 (9774)
05-16-2002 3:32 AM


They are talking about publishing the helium diffusion work. But they're far to pragmatic to even both sending a creationist rapid continental drift/Noah flood paper to a mainstream journal! Of course you think it's becasue of the (lack of) science - I think there's another reason. As for the tech AIG and ICR journals most of the papers are of high quality and are genuinely interesting IMO. They frequently debunk old creationist ideas too (like moon dust etc).
------------------
You are go for TLI

Replies to this message:
 Message 35 by Joe Meert, posted 05-16-2002 3:39 AM Tranquility Base has not replied

  
Joe Meert
Member (Idle past 5707 days)
Posts: 913
From: Gainesville
Joined: 03-02-2002


Message 35 of 59 (9776)
05-16-2002 3:39 AM
Reply to: Message 34 by Tranquility Base
05-16-2002 3:32 AM


quote:
Originally posted by Tranquility Base:
They are talking about publishing the helium diffusion work. But they're far to pragmatic to even both sending a creationist rapid continental drift/Noah flood paper to a mainstream journal! Of course you think it's becasue of the (lack of) science - I think there's another reason. As for the tech AIG and ICR journals most of the papers are of high quality and are genuinely interesting IMO. They frequently debunk old creationist ideas too (like moon dust etc).

JM: They are vanity journals meant to circumvent the critical eyes of real science. Real science subjects itself to all criticisms. Austin is well aware that good science, even if biblical, can be published with strong supporting data. Surely a 'Phded' physicist know this as well.
Cheers
Joe Meert

This message is a reply to:
 Message 34 by Tranquility Base, posted 05-16-2002 3:32 AM Tranquility Base has not replied

  
Tranquility Base
Inactive Member


Message 36 of 59 (9777)
05-16-2002 3:45 AM


I don't deny that in the past many creaitonists have been slack at publishing mainstream.

Replies to this message:
 Message 37 by mark24, posted 05-16-2002 8:08 AM Tranquility Base has replied

  
mark24
Member (Idle past 5222 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 37 of 59 (9784)
05-16-2002 8:08 AM
Reply to: Message 36 by Tranquility Base
05-16-2002 3:45 AM


Tranquility Base,
If I can back up a bit, Joe made some important points re. paleosols that were passed over. It seems to me that fossil forests & paleosols represent a direct falsification of the biblical flood. Since paleosols can’t form under flood conditions, & ROOTED (in said paleosols) trees certainly can’t grow in formations that creationists tell us are flood deposits.
http://www.geocities.com/earthhistory/forests.htm
1. Eocene Fossil Forests in Yellowstone National Park
The Lamar River Formation in Yellowstone Park contains the best known example of a "fossil forest." Here we find multiple levels of in situ trees. The upright trees at Specimen Ridge are rooted in fine-grained tuffaceous sandstone and encased in conglomeratic mudflows. The grain size of the conglomerate decreases away from the location of the volcanic source areas, the East and West Absaroka belts. Also, the ratio of upright, in situ trees to horizontal trees increases away from the Eocene volcanic source areas - the eruptions and mud flows flattened whole forests proximal to the source, while many trees are preserved in growth position in more distal locations, such as at Specimen Ridge. Although it is unclear how many successive forest layers are present in the Lamar River Formation, estimates range from 9-12 for Specimen Ridge. Some of the levels have very wide and old trees trunks.
Tall upright trees with unbroken trunks. narrow root systems, and intact roots penetrating the substrate were apparently preserved were they grew. Unlike the tall in situ trees, many upright stumps have short trunks and roots broken prior to burial in a conglomerate with no organic zone, weathering profile, or color change. The bark of these trees is rarely preserved, owing to abrasion.
Tree stumps are not rooted in conglomerates, but rather in underlying fine-grained tuffaceous sandstones. (2) Some of the conglomerates have flow structures that show that they buried in-place trees. (3) The upper parts of some stumps and logs surrounded by conglomerates are severely abraded, but the lower parts contained within tuffaceous sandstones commonly have good root systems. This also suggests that mudflows moved over preexisting trees. (4) Thin sections show no evidence of extensive current activity in the tuffaceous sandstone in which the stumps are rooted. In contrast, most textural evidence indicates the existence of a soil around the roots (p. 161).
Specimens were collected of material surrounding the roots of vertical tree stumps at each of the 8 forest levels examined . . . Thin sections of 12 of these rtocks give no indication of significant current activity at any of the stump levels. Most of the sandstones consist of poorly sorted, angular volcanic rock fragments in a groundmass of small, broken crystals of plagioclase . . . Neither the rock fragments nor plagioclase grains show preferred orientation or imbrication, characteristics that would a current-dominated depositional system. All but two of the samples from the root zones [however] exhibit a 'swirly' texture in thin section, which is characteristic of the disturbed upper part of a soil zone (p. 161).
There are more examples at the web site quoted.
http://members.aol.com/dwise1/cre_ev/geology.html
"Another case of superpositioned fossils is found at Specimen Ridge in Yellowstone Park, where a nearby volcano buried 27 forests one atop the other. After an eruption buried the first forest and the exposed parts of the trees rotted away, a new forest grew. Then this forest suffered the same fate and the cycle repeated. According to Flood Geology's timetable, all 27 generations of forest had to have grown within a single year. Instead, scientists estimate that this entire formation took over 20,000 years to form (the MINIMUM time required since the oldest trees of each layer were about 500 years old and it takes about 200 years for igneous rock to become soil). Flood Geology tries to claim that all these trees washed up here and were buried where they had beached. But beached trees all lie on their sides and many of these are standing upright. Also, uprooted trees have incomplete root systems and the upright trunks here all have complete root systems, indicating that they had been buried where they grew. Furthermore, the ground level of the forest floor can be determined for each layer. Flood geologist Harry Coffin has claimed that tree rings within a given
fossil forest layer do not cross correlate. For one thing, this implies variance in rainfall thus refuting the creationist claim that there was no rain before the Flood (minor point). However, if all these trees had supposedly died within the same year, then they should ALL cross correlate THROUGHOUT THE FORMATION."
I think it is reasonable to assume that fossilised trees with root systems in place (to a greater or lesser degree), are rooted in SOIL. Meaning paleosols exist, contrary to the flood model.
A single pre-holocene petrified forest with rooted trees in paleosols (by definition) represents a falsification of the biblical flood. Multiple layers of fossil forest that estimates put at 20,000 years (MINIMUM) to form, also represent the same to YEC timelines.
Also, if I can refer you back to post 8, all large transported trees & stumps are supposed to be found in the upper flood deposits, not alongside rooted examples (that can't float). So why are transported, unrooted tree stumps found in late permian, early triassic rocks (earlier?)?
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.
[This message has been edited by mark24, 05-16-2002]
[This message has been edited by mark24, 05-16-2002]

This message is a reply to:
 Message 36 by Tranquility Base, posted 05-16-2002 3:45 AM Tranquility Base has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 40 by Tranquility Base, posted 05-16-2002 8:45 PM mark24 has replied

  
edge
Member (Idle past 1733 days)
Posts: 4696
From: Colorado, USA
Joined: 01-09-2002


Message 38 of 59 (9794)
05-16-2002 12:09 PM
Reply to: Message 23 by Tranquility Base
05-16-2002 12:36 AM


quote:
Originally posted by Tranquility Base:
Percy we are already qualitatively happy that our model could explain all these things without any alternative physics (other than accelerated decay).
So, you are saying that you have no problem connecting these dots (including variable decay rates), but you have a reeeeeal problem with a paucity of transitionals below the family level?
quote:
Do you guys really think that you have explained the origin of the geological column in detail?
No, there are always some unexplained areas. Now, do you really think that you have explained variable radiolological decay rates? How about c-decay? Exactly what is your point here? Do we need to have every detail of the earth's history worked out before you will think about accepting it?
quote:
No you have not. Charles Lyell just said he had!
Could you please document this? I seriously doubt that Lyell felt that everything was worked out in the geological time scale ("in detail," as you seem to require).
quote:
There is very little simulation work done on that mainly becasue it's too hard.
True. The world is a lot more complex than the controlled environment that you create in your lab. But what is your point here? Do you think that because it is a difficult problem that we should attribute it all to supernatural processes?
quote:
Have you explained quantitatively and deterministically why there has been 7 or 8 sea level rises and falls over the last 500 million years that completely and repeatedly inundated many continents ? Not really, not quantitatively.
Why is this necessary? And what does it have to do with challenging evolution? Seems to me that if there were this many sea level rises, the bible should explain it? Not? How many floods do you want?
You seem to put a lot of credence in quantitative analysis. Can you show us some of this quantitative work that has been done by flood geologists?
Elsewhere you have repeatedly ask if we have heard of cyclothems. I fail to see the relevance to this discussion. Perhaps if you explained rather than asking cryptic questions, you might get a response. Would you please tell us how cyclothems are explained by the flood?
[This message has been edited by edge, 05-16-2002]

This message is a reply to:
 Message 23 by Tranquility Base, posted 05-16-2002 12:36 AM Tranquility Base has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 43 by Tranquility Base, posted 05-16-2002 9:07 PM edge has replied

  
edge
Member (Idle past 1733 days)
Posts: 4696
From: Colorado, USA
Joined: 01-09-2002


Message 39 of 59 (9795)
05-16-2002 12:32 PM
Reply to: Message 16 by Tranquility Base
05-15-2002 9:55 PM


quote:
Originally posted by Tranquility Base:
Well I can't be absolutely positive about the conformity of the red/white layers I've seen on the NSW coast but it was a very flat interface.
The type of unconformity you refer to is called a 'disconformity' and it represents an interruption of deposition. The interruption may be long or short. It may define a facies change or not. In this case, it appears that it represents a period of transgression. I'm not sure what you are getting at on this issue. This is fairly common in the geological record.
quote:
The one I can be sure of is cyclothems. Do you know about them?
Yes.
quote:
Joe, your 'no evidnce for rapid geological reversals' is based on the evolutiuonary time scale.
Funny how these rapid reversals seem to have stopped when we began to be able to measure magnetic fields.
quote:
We are saying that that is wrong becasue of the flood and accelrated decay!
Good, then you have some independent evidence for the flood!
quote:
You can't look at our stuff and try and marry it into your system and then pronounce it incorrect.
However, we can compare it to other pieces of data with which it disagrees; the fossil record being one.
quote:
We think those reversals happened very rapidly during the flood probably due to accelerated decay.
Good. What caused the decay to increase? And why did it suddenly decide to occur during the flood? What is your independent evidence for rapid magnetic reversals?
quote:
It's internally consistent and there are quantitative models.
Yes, it is internally consistent. But how about being verifiable with independent evidence? How about it being externally consistent with other forms of evidence such as radiometric dating and physical properties of the mantle?
quote:
And your dismisal of the radiodecay - creationist calculations of the heat issue etc show that it is not a big problem. I'll post that some time for you.
No it isn't a problem. Baumgardner needs to have extremely high heat flows in order to make his model work. However, he neglects the nagging side effect of complete sterlization of the earth by those heat flows.
quote:
And how can we misinterpret the 100,000-fold (!) excess helium in granites and shortfall in the atmosphere?
You make a nice assertion. Please go over the details of this calculation for us. I usually find that these theories collapse when confronted with details.
quote:
Mainstreamers have agreed that the 'helium budget problem will not go away' in the atmosphere ...
Not clear what you mean here. '...will not go away in the atmosphere... ?'
quote:
... and I haven't read a critique yet of the recent granite helium (vast) excess.
Seems to me this has been done, but it's been a long time since I've heard this one. But nevertheless, get us some more details and we can discuss it. Maybe on a different thread.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 16 by Tranquility Base, posted 05-15-2002 9:55 PM Tranquility Base has not replied

  
Tranquility Base
Inactive Member


Message 40 of 59 (9811)
05-16-2002 8:45 PM
Reply to: Message 37 by mark24
05-16-2002 8:08 AM


Mark, over the coming weeks I will cite material and provide links but I have recently read direct contradictions of the fascinating Yellowstone forests. Creationists are convinced that these '27 generations' of forests are not that at all but rather Mt St Helens type burial of a single catastrophically uprooted forest. Are you aware of Steve Austin's study of the Mt St Helens uprooted mats and how the trees, in some cases complete with root systems, frequently sink vertically and lodge themsleves into mud vertically? He has underwater video footage (I have the VHS tape in my hand) taken shortly after the erruption documenting the sinking logs - it is fascinating and erie footge.
Anyway, I know these guys have also been to Yellowstone and they find your 27 forests consistent with a single (much larger) Mt St Helens type event. I'll post details later but as a scientist I am currently satisfied that this is a good answer to your point. Paleosoils? Why shouldn't soils be deposited as mud etc? They are at My St Helens too.
I wont try and say that they have proved this beyond doubt - but they have definitely made a good case and are still working on these things. Some of you can poke fun at it but it doesn't take away from their hard work and good science IMO. As some of you know Austin's related floating mat hypothesis of coal formation is treated quite seriously and I've got multiple quotes of mainstream geolgoists who agree that coal formation and 100s of feet of cyclothems were rapid.
------------------
You are go for TLI

This message is a reply to:
 Message 37 by mark24, posted 05-16-2002 8:08 AM mark24 has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 41 by TrueCreation, posted 05-16-2002 8:55 PM Tranquility Base has replied
 Message 42 by Joe Meert, posted 05-16-2002 8:59 PM Tranquility Base has not replied
 Message 44 by mark24, posted 05-16-2002 9:07 PM Tranquility Base has not replied

  
TrueCreation
Inactive Member


Message 41 of 59 (9813)
05-16-2002 8:55 PM
Reply to: Message 40 by Tranquility Base
05-16-2002 8:45 PM


"but as a scientist "
--What is your area of expertise?
------------------

This message is a reply to:
 Message 40 by Tranquility Base, posted 05-16-2002 8:45 PM Tranquility Base has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 45 by Tranquility Base, posted 05-16-2002 9:34 PM TrueCreation has replied

  
Joe Meert
Member (Idle past 5707 days)
Posts: 913
From: Gainesville
Joined: 03-02-2002


Message 42 of 59 (9814)
05-16-2002 8:59 PM
Reply to: Message 40 by Tranquility Base
05-16-2002 8:45 PM


quote:
Anyway, I know these guys have also been to Yellowstone and they find your 27 forests consistent with a single (much larger) Mt St Helens type event. I'll post details later but as a scientist I am currently satisfied that this is a good answer to your point. Paleosoils? Why shouldn't soils be deposited as mud etc? They are at My St Helens too.
JM: Published where?
quote:
I wont try and say that they have proved this beyond doubt
JM: In fact, they've nothing more than unpublished conjecture at this point. I don't think you've grasped the difference between the St. Helen's trees and the Yellowstone forests. The St. Helen's logs simply don't fit the mold of the Yellowstone, sorry.
quote:
- but they have definitely made a good case and are still working on these things.
JM: No, they've published nothing to support your assertion in the scientific journals.
quote:
Some of you can poke fun at it but it doesn't take away from their hard work and good science IMO. As some of you know Austin's related floating mat hypothesis of coal formation is treated quite seriously
JM: By who? I can't think of a single publication in the scientific literature relating coal formation to floating vegetation mats after the Noachian flood. Perhaps you can point me to the published works?
quote:
and I've got multiple quotes of mainstream geolgoists who agree that coal formation and 100s of feet of cyclothems were rapid.
JM: More quote mining? Is this the sole basis for 'creation science'? It seems to be. Surely a 'PhDed physicist' working in the mainstream know the value of published works. Where did you get your Ph.D.?
Cheers
Joe Meert

This message is a reply to:
 Message 40 by Tranquility Base, posted 05-16-2002 8:45 PM Tranquility Base has not replied

  
Tranquility Base
Inactive Member


Message 43 of 59 (9815)
05-16-2002 9:07 PM
Reply to: Message 38 by edge
05-16-2002 12:09 PM


Edge, in my first point I simply wanted to point out that the idea of accelerated decay and associated radiogenic heating is a priori a sensible idea (for us). Almost every model starts out as a hand waving execise. You must know this. So initially we put up with holes just as Darwinism did. But I am also aware of numerous quantitative studies by these guys as well so I'm satisfied that things are proceeding.
No one is trying to claim they have the ultimate answer yet! But they have a possible answer and I am satisfied currently. 5 years down the track I might not be. Many of the initial detractors that you guys point out I have already read the explanations of previously (too much heat etc). I agree we need to get specific but I'll need to get up to speed if we want to do that and I will with the qualification that I am a physicist not a geophysicist.
Do I expect mainstreamers to have all the answers? No, but then neither should you of us. In the first instance we should see which model explains the gross structure of the geological column better. I honestly believe it is the flood model and will post on this.
I'll also post my stuff on cycothems soon - all I'll be saying is that there seems to be overwhelming evidence that these were rapdily formed (including coal) and they represent 100s and 1000s of feet of the geological column. It begs the question whether much of the column was catastrophically generated, and perhaps in one event. Sure you guys can say that only that component was rapid but it still begs the question.
Accelerated decay and rapid drift? The two have only recently been linked anyway. It follows quite naturally that vast radioheating might generate rapid reversals. I can't personally gaurentee that but lets keep an eye on the cals ans ims coming out. And let me have a look at what has been done too.
Do you really think that the mainstream solution to all of this is so good? See my thread on 'Mainstream continental drift'.
------------------
You are go for TLI

This message is a reply to:
 Message 38 by edge, posted 05-16-2002 12:09 PM edge has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 52 by edge, posted 05-16-2002 10:42 PM Tranquility Base has replied

  
mark24
Member (Idle past 5222 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 44 of 59 (9816)
05-16-2002 9:07 PM
Reply to: Message 40 by Tranquility Base
05-16-2002 8:45 PM


quote:
Originally posted by Tranquility Base:
Mark, over the coming weeks I will cite material and provide links but I have recently read direct contradictions of the fascinating Yellowstone forests. Creationists are convinced that these '27 generations' of forests are not that at all but rather Mt St Helens type burial of a single catastrophically uprooted forest. Are you aware of Steve Austin's study of the Mt St Helens uprooted mats and how the trees, in some cases complete with root systems, frequently sink vertically and lodge themsleves into mud vertically? He has underwater video footage (I have the VHS tape in my hand) taken shortly after the erruption documenting the sinking logs - it is fascinating and erie footge.
Anyway, I know these guys have also been to Yellowstone and they find your 27 forests consistent with a single (much larger) Mt St Helens type event. I'll post details later but as a scientist I am currently satisfied that this is a good answer to your point. Paleosoils? Why shouldn't soils be deposited as mud etc? They are at My St Helens too.
I wont try and say that they have proved this beyond doubt - but they have definitely made a good case and are still working on these things. Some of you can poke fun at it but it doesn't take away from their hard work and good science IMO. As some of you know Austin's related floating mat hypothesis of coal formation is treated quite seriously and I've got multiple quotes of mainstream geolgoists who agree that coal formation and 100s of feet of cyclothems were rapid.

Tranquility Base,
I look forward to your evidence.
You could start by showing how layers of (paleosol) sandstone with rooted fossil trees embedded, have conglometrates laid upon them, & then this is repeated 27 times in a single global flood, without disturbing any of the lower layers. Your not dealing with turbidites here, or thin rythmite layers. There is evidence that each of these sandstone layers is a paleosol (see earlier post), & is not deposited catastrophically. Also all of the layers are complete, there is no mixing of forest layers beyond vertical trees.
BTW, if you have sinking logs, & it is a common occurrence, then why aren't there cambrian/pre-cambrian petrified forests? Or even single fossils trees (angiosperms & gymnosperms would be nice, rather than the early vascular species) below carboniferous strata? According to your video, these fossils should be abundant in pre-carboniferous strata.
Why aren't they?
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.
[This message has been edited by mark24, 05-16-2002]
[This message has been edited by mark24, 05-16-2002]

This message is a reply to:
 Message 40 by Tranquility Base, posted 05-16-2002 8:45 PM Tranquility Base has not replied

  
Tranquility Base
Inactive Member


Message 45 of 59 (9820)
05-16-2002 9:34 PM
Reply to: Message 41 by TrueCreation
05-16-2002 8:55 PM


I'm an experimental and theoretical molecular biologist working on genomics and protein folding (but I am still a theoretical physicist at heart) TC.
Having said that I have read a lot of research level material (reviews and monographs) on paelontology and sedimentology/stratigraphy/tectonics. I have taught myself in detail how paleontology works (and am interested to read these guys comments) and now have a good appreciation for the afore mentioned aspects of mainstream geology. But on quantitative models (whether creationist or evolutionist) I will always have to discuss other peoples work. On moelcular and genomic issues I can talk first hand.
------------------
You are go for TLI

This message is a reply to:
 Message 41 by TrueCreation, posted 05-16-2002 8:55 PM TrueCreation has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 46 by TrueCreation, posted 05-16-2002 9:43 PM Tranquility Base has replied
 Message 48 by edge, posted 05-16-2002 10:29 PM Tranquility Base has replied

  
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