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Author Topic:   Should intellectually honest fundamentalists live like the Amish?
Silent H
Member (Idle past 5848 days)
Posts: 7405
From: satellite of love
Joined: 12-11-2002


Message 27 of 303 (231226)
08-09-2005 4:53 AM
Reply to: Message 25 by Faith
08-08-2005 4:35 PM


Oil exploration can be done by digging holes all over the place and hoping to hit something. A more profitable procedure is to employ geologists who can predict possible locations based on geologic information. That includes many things, but the one thing that remains true is the nature of the deposition.
There is no creationist geological theory for oil and its specific strata orientation with any solid model nor reasoning. If you can find it then present it, otherwise you need to admit that OE geological models are the best scientific explanations for oil, and for ways to find oil (barring more modern tech).
Yes people can find oil without the explanation, but then they do not do as well when limited to predictions based on well logs, except by saying God made the flood look like the earth was as old as OE geological theory predicts... and that is a very sad answer.
This is true even if one discards biogenic theories for oil production, and embrace abiogenic theories (a growing "controversy" in geology) which view certain sediments as better traps but the oil itself coming from sub-crust material converted by deep living bacteria.
And of course we can move on to other precious materials, such as diamonds. Can you tell how long they take to form and then rise to the surface, without the benefit of "insert miracle here"? How do geologists determine a likely place to find diamonds... could it be by age and nature of a structure?
This message has been edited by holmes, 08-09-2005 04:57 AM

holmes
"...what a fool believes he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.."(D. Bros)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 25 by Faith, posted 08-08-2005 4:35 PM Faith has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 28 by Faith, posted 08-09-2005 7:24 AM Silent H has replied

Silent H
Member (Idle past 5848 days)
Posts: 7405
From: satellite of love
Joined: 12-11-2002


Message 43 of 303 (231359)
08-09-2005 12:26 PM
Reply to: Message 28 by Faith
08-09-2005 7:24 AM


That is, you do not need to hold any views as to the great age of a stratum and its fossil contents or lack thereof, you simply need to know its predictable position in the column and its value for predicting the possible location of oil. Geologists are needed because they understand the lay of the land, but they would have this knowledge with or without OE terminology.
This makes absolutely no sense. How exactly does a geologist understand the "lay of the land" in a predictive sense without using a model of stratum deposition/formation?
If they use one it will have to be OE, because there are no others unless you want to offer one?
The theory of age is irrelevant, an unnecessary detour in the recognition of the structures involved in locating anything in the geo column.
Whether one starts with deep age or not, one ends up using depositional and formational models that refute biblical depictions. If "the flood" is the answer to everything, then anything can appear anywhere and there is no predictive ability.
Geologists don't just say X precedes Y precedes Z, but understand the finding X and Y will likely mean finding Z because that is a specific depositional environment. What's even more important than predicting straight down, is predicting laterally. That involves understanding how the beds have to relate because of the nature of deposition.
Frankly you sound like someone that has no idea about geology and are just talking.
On my quick google of the subject I found that there are many indicators used in the location of oil deposits and that stratigraphy is just one and one that happens to be less in use than it used to be.
I have already said someone can just dig holes, and there are modern techniques (and equipment) which lessen the need to refer to stratigraphy. That does not wholly negate stratigraphy, nor explain why stratigraphy works as a predictor.
I have never ever appealed to "miracle" in any discussion of the Flood, ever. That straw man you are whipping must be in tatters from abuse by people who don't follow the argument.
Whoaaaaaa... maybe I missed something, but I though the flood was always described as miraculous, even by its proponents. Are you claiming that the worldwide flood as stated in the Bible occured according to normal mechanics and required no miraculous intervention by God to occur and cause certain phenomena we see today?
"Age of a structure" is unknown, irrelevant, a superfluous bit of evo theory. What is needed is to recognize the structure itself, and its association with the likelihood of finding diamonds. Diamonds are formed under great pressure. Age is irrelevant beyond a certain minimum.
So to you a sedimentary or igneous structure estimated less than a million years old, due to surrounding structures is just as likely to yield diamonds as any other structure? Oh wait, you said minimum, what minimum would that be?
By the way, if you are googling, maybe you should google geology and start brushing up on it. Deep time was a finding in geology well before Darwin came along. It is that geological theory which allowed Darwin to theorize evolution, and not the other way around.

holmes
"...what a fool believes he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.."(D. Bros)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 28 by Faith, posted 08-09-2005 7:24 AM Faith has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 45 by Faith, posted 08-09-2005 12:38 PM Silent H has replied
 Message 47 by Faith, posted 08-09-2005 12:43 PM Silent H has not replied

Silent H
Member (Idle past 5848 days)
Posts: 7405
From: satellite of love
Joined: 12-11-2002


Message 46 of 303 (231364)
08-09-2005 12:41 PM
Reply to: Message 36 by Faith
08-09-2005 11:23 AM


THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU! I could kiss your feet you dear sweet smart thing! Somebody on the evo side who can THINK!
What the hell are you talking about? Can think? How are two people whom admittedly don't know anything about a subject, and thus coming to the same errant position on a subject, an example of thinking?
Me either. It's strictly a point of logic.
Geology is not just logic. It is logic applied to obesrvations of natural phenomena to come up with theories. Those theories are then applied in a logical way to make predictions.
Now anyone can start digging holes and making well logs and learn that after a certain sequence they are likely to hit oil. Thus when they are digging and hit a sequence they can predict oil.
That would be an expensive procedure. Geologists allow you to estimate where to place wells based on deposition/formation of structures, some visible and others testable. Why don't either of you two explain how one does that without appealing to OE geological theories.
The funniest thing, and this is where we are wholly on topic, is people who will make use of geological models which are based on OE, and then simply say we know they are true as is, and discard the model which was necessary.
To put this another way, one can make a cross section and predict areas based on how structures are deposited and formed. If "the flood" is the answer to every sedimentary structure we see, and sorting is because of willy nilly or local geographical settling rules, then no structure could be estimated laterally past a few feet. Anything would go.

holmes
"...what a fool believes he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.."(D. Bros)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 36 by Faith, posted 08-09-2005 11:23 AM Faith has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 50 by Faith, posted 08-09-2005 12:54 PM Silent H has not replied
 Message 56 by Faith, posted 08-09-2005 1:36 PM Silent H has not replied

Silent H
Member (Idle past 5848 days)
Posts: 7405
From: satellite of love
Joined: 12-11-2002


Message 48 of 303 (231371)
08-09-2005 12:47 PM
Reply to: Message 45 by Faith
08-09-2005 12:38 PM


You determine the presence of oil or diamonds or whatever by knowing the formations themselves,
This makes no sense given the topic of exploration.
Annafan gets it, why don't you?
I don't get it because I took a couple years learning geology and what you two are doing is making up shit. Annafan understands YOU, not geology.
Maybe I should dig out my stratigraphy exercises and you can predict where you will find oil given certain well logs. It will be an empty map except the logs. You will have to construct the map from the logs, but there will be large stretches of unknown areas. How will you complete the map to make the prediction without ideas of how structures are formed? How will you know how structures are formed without OE geological models?
Poor Faith, no oil.

holmes
"...what a fool believes he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.."(D. Bros)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 45 by Faith, posted 08-09-2005 12:38 PM Faith has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 55 by Faith, posted 08-09-2005 1:26 PM Silent H has not replied
 Message 96 by Annafan, posted 08-10-2005 3:37 AM Silent H has not replied

Silent H
Member (Idle past 5848 days)
Posts: 7405
From: satellite of love
Joined: 12-11-2002


Message 61 of 303 (231469)
08-09-2005 3:07 PM
Reply to: Message 53 by Faith
08-09-2005 1:14 PM


Re: Finding oil is a PRACTICAL matter
oil prospectors do NOT even BOTHER to mention anything about the OE theory of the geo column. They describe the whole process of looking for oil in terms of PHYSICAL CLUES.
This just goes to show you have no idea what you actually read. You saw words and they didn't suggest anything related to OE theory and therefore they must not... hurray for you!
Here are two sites I looked over yesterday on this subject. Neither one of them gives the slightest nod to OE theory.
Really? Let's just see about that...
"Oil is formed when organic material is subjected to pressure and high temperatures, usually at a depth of several kilometres beneath the surface of the land or the ocean bed",
The first one is wholly about formation of an oil field and so nothing really about oil exploration per se. As such it doesn't need to deal with age of structures and how they were formed and only its bare physical properties, and of course has nothing to do with what I was talking about. You cannot find oil based on what that person said (in the quote anyway).
I will note however that it does discuss (contrary to your claim) OE theory. Note that it suggests organic material (that would be early life) being buried by several layers such that it can move through one form of rock to be trapped by a layer of clay. How long do you think that would take to occur? Life, death, burial, burial, pressure, movement to entrapment?
Your second citation is exactly what I was getting at...
Stratigraphic exploration consists of establishing correlations between wells, matching fossils, strata, rock hardness or softness, and electrical and radioactivity data to determine the origin, composition, distribution, and succession of rock strata. Sample logs, driller's logs, time logs, electrical logs, radioactivity logs, and acoustic logs help geologists predict where oil bearing strata occur...
See that part in yellow? Without the OE paradigm establishing those correlations would be meaningless. It is what allows you to "connect the dots" of wells to create a map.
Now it could be said that matching fossils and strata are more or less indicative of relative ages and not necessarily indicative of actual age, but it is assumptions about their formation based on OE which allows you to suggest which strata might link up with any accuracy. Does a bed appear to be a shoreline receding or advancing? That makes a difference when connecting two distant wells. How would one do that using YE which does not believe they are shorelines at all?
But lets move on, notice it mentions radioactive data. Do you know what that is used for? Usually age determination. Guess what kinds of ages they are coming up with? YE right out the window. And if you are going to pull the "radioactive dating isn't trustworthy" routine, then you are refuting your own source.
I love in an earlier post where you said geologists could say lower instead of earlier. You do understand that strata don't always lay down and stay in one place, right? Sections can be pulled down or lifted up, sometimes pitched at angles, and then eroded, then buried pulled down or lifted up and get buried some more. Heck some structures are folded and some to the point that it appears from logs at certain points that it has been flipped upside down.
Whoops. Learn about geology and get with the modern world. Its not just "theory" which predicts OE, it is practical understanding of mechanisms.
I invite you to explain how you would determine strata using well logs based on YEC/Flood theories which do not allow for depositional theories of sedimentary strata beyond "shaken and settled column".

holmes
"...what a fool believes he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.."(D. Bros)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 53 by Faith, posted 08-09-2005 1:14 PM Faith has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 62 by Faith, posted 08-09-2005 4:07 PM Silent H has not replied
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 Message 64 by Faith, posted 08-09-2005 4:12 PM Silent H has not replied
 Message 71 by Jazzns, posted 08-09-2005 5:12 PM Silent H has not replied
 Message 77 by randman, posted 08-09-2005 5:49 PM Silent H has not replied

Silent H
Member (Idle past 5848 days)
Posts: 7405
From: satellite of love
Joined: 12-11-2002


Message 98 of 303 (231718)
08-10-2005 6:35 AM


Faith and Randman are full of schist
I delivered a reply that involved questions that needed to be answered. Questions based on practical issues in geology. Both you two ignored the questions in order to simply assert (or reassert) your ignorance regarding geology and attack me with ad hominems.
I have agreed that people can use other techniques to "detect" oil, or even "find" oil. The question I am addressing is exploration, which is prediction of areas to look for new reserves that may not have other conventional means of detection or have not been tested in that fashion yet. That was addressed in Faith's article as the third tool of oil exploration. I will note that she decided to wholly ignore my pointing out it referred to radioactive dating. But let's get on with this...
Jazzns provided an example of one well log, if you did not understand what a well log was. He showed how OE paradigm can aid in understanding that one log. I was discussing map making using several logs. How do you build a MAP of largescale areas using well logs without an understanding or presuppostion of depositional rules from OE? I asked the question and I deserve an answer.
Most maps are based on assumptions derived from depositional models. A shake and bake, or YEC Flood model removes modern depositional models from being used. You cannot discuss shoreline recession and advancement. And you certainly cannot discuss burial of a sedimentary bed followed by tilting followed by AERIAL erosion followed by burial again. This is a concrete problem for you two to answer. Using a YEC model, how do you explain solidification, tilting, and then AERIAL erosion, before further burial during a flood?
Think that has nothing to do with making maps of an area based on well logs? Think that has nothing to do with estimating where new wells should be dug? Then you are thinking about something other than geology and oil exploration.
You want some citations to add to the discussion? Fine. I wish I could put on my old strat exercise books just to ask you to draw the maps and explain why you built the map you did, how you connected one well log to the next. But alas I will settle for looking at the use of OE vs YE models in geology and oil exploration.
First is a map of the US. This is a great map as it merges both topography and geology. Note that this map is referred to as a tapestry of TIME and terrain. You can play with this page and see how geologists have dated features as well as description of features. Oh yeah, I haven't even asked you for explanations of accreted terrain, but that ought to be interesting.
I would note that geologists would not need absolute dating to reach something beyond 6-10K age of earth, it is relative dating alone given how structures interact that built old earth paradigms, but you'll see that later.
Okay so, lets go back to Faith's citation of a handbook on oil exploration. It points out and I have already agreed one can use other methods to detect the presence of or find pockets of oil. Those first two cover primary methods of oil exploration, and why shouldn't they? But what about speculation or reading well logs within a field? This time we'll avoid Faith's quotemining (which still didn't help)...
A final method of exploration is the study of stratigraphy. Stratigraphic exploration consists of establishing correlations between wells, matching fossils, strata, rock hardness or softness, and electrical and radioactivity data to determine the origin, composition, distribution, and succession of rock strata. Sample logs, driller's logs, time logs, electrical logs, radioactivity logs, and acoustic logs help geologists predict where oil bearing strata occur... This data is correlated with other information to enhance the chance of finding oil...
Radioactivity Logs, which record both gamma-ray and neutron values, have been in use productively since 1941. Because radioactivity can be measured with precision it can be used to identify different layers within beds....
Maps, including contour, isopach, cross sections, and three dimensional computer images, also aid the petroleum explorer in locating oil and gas. Contour maps give details of subsurface structural features enabling geologists to visualize three dimensional structures. Contour maps include information about porosity, permeability, and structural arrangements such as faults, pinch-outs, salt domes, and old shorelines.
So stratigraphy, as I said and you denied, helps in oil exploration via creating maps by identifying rock beds, using among other things radioactive dating to match strata, and identification of their nature such as things like ohhhh let's say: old shorelines. Once again I ask you to deal with the reality of geology in oil exploration. How do stratigraphers not use OE paradigms, when they construct large scale maps using radioactive dating (productively I might note) and concepts such as shorelines?
But let's look for more discussion. Here is a page on petroleum geology. You will note that it says:
In terms of source rock analysis, several facts need to be established. Firstly, the question of whether there actually is any source rock in the area must be answered. Delineation and identification of potential source rocks depends on studies of the local stratigraphy, palaeogeography and sedimentology to determine the likelihood of organic-rich sediments having been deposited in the past.
But let's say abiogenesis of oil becomes the predominate theory and so source rock is no longer necessary, then that still leaves the search for reservoir rock...
The existence of a reservoir rock (typically, sandstones and fractured limestones) is determined through a combination of regional studies (i.e. analysis of other wells in the area), stratigraphy and sedimentology (to quantify the pattern and extent of sedimentation) and seismic interpretation.
Paleogeography should be obvious and lets dismiss it casually as being a creation of those evilutionists. What is stratigraphy?
Stratigraphy, a branch of geology, is basically the study of rock layers and layering (stratification). It is primarily used in the study of sedimentary and layered volcanic rocks. The subject was essentially invented and first rigorously applied by William Smith in England in the 1790s and early 1800s. Smith, known as the Father of English Geology, created the first geologic map of England and first recognized the significance of strata or rock layering.
Hmmmm...
Key elements of stratigraphy involve understanding how certain geometric relationships between rock layers arise and what these geometries mean in terms of depositional environment. One of stratigraphy's basic concepts is codified in the Law of Superposition, which simply states that, in an undeformed stratigraphic sequence, the oldest strata occur at the base of the sequence.
Note that I left in that last sentence as a nod (or thumb to nose) to your suggestion that lower equals older. Here we see that that is only true in undeformed sequences, and indeed it is things like erosion and deformation which give stratigraphers their jobs, and that requires understanding depositional environments!
And just to add to your understanding of geology, relative age dating, OE, and evolution, here is the following...
Biostratigraphy or paleontologic stratigraphy is based on fossil evidence in the rock layers. Strata from widespread locations containing the same fossil fauna and flora are correlatable in time. Biologic stratigraphy was based on William Smith's principle of faunal succession, which predated, and was one of the first and most powerful lines of evidence for, biological evolution. It provides strong evidence for formation (speciation) of and the extinction of species. The geologic time scale was developed during the 1800s based on the evidence of biologic stratigraphy and faunal succession. This timescale remained a relative scale until the development of radiometric dating, which gave it and the stratigraphy it was based on an absolute time framework, leading to the development of chronostratigraphy.
Now let's put this altogether. Stratigraphic mapping is based on concepts of depositional models. Stratigraphy at its inception accumulated relative age data of structures which itself refuted YE and suggested not just OE but because of the ordering of life in strata, evolution. This was later corroborated by radioactive dating.
Depositional models, which involve concepts foreign to flood hypotheses, and radioactive dating, which corroborates relative age dates beyond YE, are used by modern stratigraphers to make maps which can identify source or reservoir rock.
Okay, so who care about evidence for what those evilutionist stratigraphers say they use anyway, right? Evidence that geologists use creo models. especially successful models, would say something just the same. So where are they?
Here is an article on a guy that claims to have predicted a major oil find under the dead sea, and is looking for investors, based on YE/Flood models. The review is biased of course as the author is skeptical. But have a look. Maybe you want to invest. I have no idea of that regional geology, but personally I wouldn't put money in unless a depositional environment likely to trap or form oil was offered from an OE paradigm.
Now if this single guy is doing it, then there must be others, right?
Here's a guy that is supposedly a real geologist and YEC. who pitched YEC models to an oil company. Guess what the answer was...
When I was finishing my Ph.D. work, having developed a real love for petroleum exploration, I approached the research branch of a major oil company with a proposal. Pointing out that an exploration program based on old-earth/uniformitarian concepts doesn't work very well (only about one exploration well in 50 produces enough oil to pay for itself), I proposed that this company establish a team of young-earth creationist/catastrophists to see if a better exploration program could be developed.
To fund a research team of five or so creationist geologists for several years would cost about the same as one dry hole. Certainly we couldn't do any worse.
Unfortunately, my proposal was not accepted (maybe this was good, for I took a university faculty position and eventually ended up at ICR). I still don't know for sure if a Flood-geology approach would work better, but I think it could. At least it wouldn't be based on a wrong premise.
YEC geologists in oil firms. Are there figures for this? Not that I could find. But I sure did find an interesting anecdotal account...
For years I struggled to understand how the geologic data I worked with everyday could be fit into a Biblical perspective. Being a physics major in college I had no geology courses. Thus, as a young Christian, when I was presented with the view that Christians must believe in a young-earth and global flood, I went along willingly. I knew there were problems but I thought I was going to solve them... I finally found work as a geophysicist working for a seismic company. Within a year, I was processing seismic data for Atlantic Richfield.
This was where I first became exposed to the problems geology presented to the idea of a global flood...
I worked hard over the next few years to solve these problems. I published 20+ items in the Creation Research Society Quarterly. I would listen to ICR, have discussions with people like Slusher, Gish, Austin, Barnes and also discuss things with some of their graduates that I had hired.
In order to get closer to the data and know it better, with the hope of finding a solution, I changed subdivisions of my work in 1980. I left seismic processing and went into seismic interpretation where I would have to deal with more geologic data. My horror at what I was seeing only increased...
The previous cited author who attempted to convince an oil company to do YEC research challenged this author at a conference. This author revealed the other author's claim to be working for an oil company to be fraudulent. Whoops. He goes on...
But eventually, by 1994 I was through with young-earth creationISM. Nothing that young-earth creationists had taught me about geology turned out to be true. I took a poll of my ICR graduate friends who have worked in the oil industry. I asked them one question.
"From your oil industry experience, did any fact that you were taught at ICR, which challenged current geological thinking, turn out in the long run to be true? ,"
That is a very simple question. One man, Steve Robertson, who worked for Shell grew real silent on the phone, sighed and softly said 'No!' A very close friend that I had hired at Arco, after hearing the question, exclaimed, "Wait a minute. There has to be one!" But he could not name one. I can not name one. No one else could either. One man I could not reach, to ask that question, had a crisis of faith about two years after coming into the oil industry. I do not know what his spiritual state is now but he was in bad shape the last time I talked to him.
Well that sure was enlightening. You guys find me any geologist, especially an oil exploration geologist that does not end up using OE paradigms. I would seriously like answers to some of the issues I and this last author have found in the geological record, and are necessary for dealing with when making maps.
It seems to me you guys are making an argument along the lines of "No one really needs atomic theory to do chemistry, its just reading what's on the labels, using detectors of some kind, and looking at a periodical chart... which doesn't really have to mean anything about actual elements."
That is you are taking for granted, the products of models and tools which inherently include OE paradigms, and you just haven't figured it out because you don't go to the actual data to see how it gets processed for your use.

holmes
"...what a fool believes he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.."(D. Bros)

Replies to this message:
 Message 99 by CK, posted 08-10-2005 6:42 AM Silent H has not replied
 Message 103 by paisano, posted 08-10-2005 8:33 AM Silent H has not replied
 Message 104 by Faith, posted 08-10-2005 8:47 AM Silent H has replied
 Message 106 by Faith, posted 08-10-2005 8:56 AM Silent H has replied
 Message 111 by Faith, posted 08-10-2005 9:21 AM Silent H has replied
 Message 127 by Faith, posted 08-10-2005 6:14 PM Silent H has not replied
 Message 130 by Faith, posted 08-10-2005 8:27 PM Silent H has replied
 Message 131 by Faith, posted 08-10-2005 8:30 PM Silent H has not replied

Silent H
Member (Idle past 5848 days)
Posts: 7405
From: satellite of love
Joined: 12-11-2002


Message 107 of 303 (231761)
08-10-2005 9:02 AM
Reply to: Message 104 by Faith
08-10-2005 8:47 AM


Re: Faith and Randman are full of schist
Irrelevant straw man. Nobody has been claiming anything about "other" techniques. I have been addressing current techniques, all no doubt developed out of the OE but nevertheless in no way dependent on it.
Are you kidding me? You must be kidding me.
By "other" techniques, I was simply refering to techniques besides stratigraphic tools, which means current techniques. I thought I was being helpful by showing a difference between the different techniques as mentioned in your own source article.
The first two listed were about finding or detecting the presence of oil or formations likely to hold oil. They were based on detection apparatus that did not require much if any stratigraphic geological knowledge and only geochemical or litho/mineralogical knowledge. The third method listed was stratigraphy and was not about detecting or finding deposits based on existing data on specific areas, but rather projecting potential sites through mapmaking techniques.
Thus my post contained absolutely no strawmen. As it stands there was a hell of a lot more to my post than that one sentence.
You have nothing more to say on that entire post, than to incorrectly label that one sentence as a strawman? The rest of that post was not dependent at all on what other techniques I might have thought you were refering to.
I'm going to give you a second crack at being honest and reading my post full through, and answering my questions to you. If you wish to be dishonest, by all means let me know.
Annafun and 100% of oil exploration geologists get it... why don't you?

holmes
"...what a fool believes he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.."(D. Bros)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 104 by Faith, posted 08-10-2005 8:47 AM Faith has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 113 by Faith, posted 08-10-2005 9:25 AM Silent H has not replied

Silent H
Member (Idle past 5848 days)
Posts: 7405
From: satellite of love
Joined: 12-11-2002


Message 109 of 303 (231768)
08-10-2005 9:15 AM
Reply to: Message 106 by Faith
08-10-2005 8:56 AM


Re: Faith and Randman are full of schist
The fact is that it was not about DATING at all, but about radioactivitiy as a means of identifying physical characteristics of the rocks...
My error. You are correct that the handbook was in fact referring to a type of rock testing which used radioactivity, rather than radioactive dating of rock specimens with results entered into the log.
Age would be irrelevant to that test.
So now deal with the rest of the post.
Geologists do date rock samples, and I even allowed you to skate on absolute (radioactive) dating to just deal with issues resulting from relative dating which your own source describes. For example there is no such thing as mapping old shorelines without at least relative dating.

holmes
"...what a fool believes he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.."(D. Bros)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 106 by Faith, posted 08-10-2005 8:56 AM Faith has not replied

Silent H
Member (Idle past 5848 days)
Posts: 7405
From: satellite of love
Joined: 12-11-2002


Message 115 of 303 (231794)
08-10-2005 10:17 AM
Reply to: Message 111 by Faith
08-10-2005 9:21 AM


Re: Faith and Randman are full of schist
And the links I gave bear out this observation, in that they make NO mention whatever of "depositional environments."
I showed you where it said that, and gave you links to discussions on stratigraphy which explained that reality.
What is your problem?
We do not NEED to discuss shoreline recession and advancement in order to find oil, just as those oil exploration companies do not discuss it.
Your own citation sure as hell discussed it, and I pointed it out to you. Are you now going to deny it is one of the things that it said was among the important features stratigraphers find for use in oil exploration?
I think that pretty would reach the level of lying.
Again, who needs to? And again, the alleged HISTORY of the formation of the rocks in question is IRRELEVANT.
Not when making maps, jackass. That is what I have been hammering away on. Maps, mapmaking, map building, the third tool used according to your own citation which was stratigraphy and which included a whole discussion of MAP MAKING!
You cannot build a map from separate well logs, without some sort of theory regarding depositional environment to allow you to connect dots and predict as yet unseen structures.
If you can do this without a paradigm of any kind on structure formation, then I would like to have a description of that process.
I might add I would like you to find me one oil exploration geologist who believes and can get away with YE beliefs.
NOBODY IS USING A YEC MODEL!!!! Are you reading at ALL?
Perhaps you should try reading. Jazz and I were not discussing OE models to explain features just for there to be an explanation of why they look as they do. The model allows one to PREDICT structures or shapes of structures. That is of PRACTICAL use.
If you are not using a modelling process based on OE mechanisms, then please explain to a geologist who needs to fill in his map, what rules he should be using to estimate structures? If you reject OE, and are YE then my guess is it has to be some rules derived from or consistent with YE modelling.
Now I can get fucking short with you and state that the concept of a shoreline does not come from OE "theory" but the fact that we see shorelines. You do agree we have those right? And as they advance and recede we get different depositional environments at (below) those shorelines. Get it? Now why do you think a geologist would interpret a similar depositional environment near the surface as one way down below? Just to stick it to the author of Genesis?
Oil itself is not a product of OE models. Oil exploration in general is not a product of OE models (your own citation suggests geology itself wasn't really used until the 1920s). However stratigraphic map making for use in oil exploration sure as shit uses OE models of structure formation. It has to use some model or the maps could not be made.
And by the way, how do you think geologists determine the difference between aerial and aquatic erosion of a structure?

holmes
"...what a fool believes he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.."(D. Bros)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 111 by Faith, posted 08-10-2005 9:21 AM Faith has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 118 by Faith, posted 08-10-2005 12:13 PM Silent H has replied
 Message 119 by Faith, posted 08-10-2005 12:21 PM Silent H has replied

Silent H
Member (Idle past 5848 days)
Posts: 7405
From: satellite of love
Joined: 12-11-2002


Message 122 of 303 (231897)
08-10-2005 1:28 PM
Reply to: Message 118 by Faith
08-10-2005 12:13 PM


Re: Faith and Randman are full of schist
Message 62 and Message 64
That didn't address anything I was talking about. You said your links made no mention of depositional environments nor shoreline advancement and recession. I pointed out they did.
The replies you mention above are not to the links you cited, but rather your continual monologue on what you think geologists do.
If this was supposed to suggest that your link did not mention shorelines and such, then I guess you have now reached the level of lying. Certainly you have reached a minor pinnacle of deceit.

holmes
"...what a fool believes he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.."(D. Bros)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 118 by Faith, posted 08-10-2005 12:13 PM Faith has not replied

Silent H
Member (Idle past 5848 days)
Posts: 7405
From: satellite of love
Joined: 12-11-2002


Message 123 of 303 (231915)
08-10-2005 1:59 PM
Reply to: Message 119 by Faith
08-10-2005 12:21 PM


Re: Faith and Randman are full of schist
You have not described this process in any way a person could visualize, but I venture to guess that "depositional environments" have nothing to do with it
Your own source mentioned depositional environments when it talked about things like shorelines. When are you going to admit the simple fact that your own citation included an OE reference to a specific DE as something important that stratigraphers try to map?
merely knowledge of predictable stratigraphic formations -- PHYSICAL configurations, not fairy tale explanations of how they got that way.
I'm sorry, but what can one call knowledge or predictable regarding a stratigraphic formation, without a model to guide one? It is not merely physical properties and I'll try to show you why.
Jazzns gave and example of a log, imagine several more perhaps in a rectangular arrangement plus one in the center. That is four more logs, creating the corners of a square with a dot in the center. Now imagine that the logs do not have the same contents at each level, and some at varying thicknesses. How then do you make a map of that square area, in cross section of depth? That goes double for the unknown area.
You hit it on the head when you mentioned "predictable". What makes something predictable, including formations, is to have a theory about how it was formed. Otherwise you have no clue if a "formation" is suddenly going to take a nose dive, or turn from sand into clay or an olivine wall.
According to your strawman of geology, a person just "knows" "physical configurations". Thus a specific configuration of sand and clay and sand again may be expected to zig zag back and forth when viewed as a cross section from top to bottom. Not because it is a "shoreline" referencing the exact same depositional environment one can find near the surface of a shoreline which has receded or advnaced, but because it is a "zoreline" where that same type of sand-clay-sand formation seen at depth has had predictable zig zag formation?
That seems to be willfull ignorance, or mere semantic gamesmanship. If one sees something happening at the surface and can see that again at depth, why does it change for you from something one understands and so can predict based on its known properties at the surface, to something one must understand using some completely different criteria?
In fact, if you are to follow your line of logic then we should not be identifying fossils either. How can we say what they are except pretty mineral deposits? If we cannot recognize the indication of a shoreline at depth, then why do we identify things that look like organic life (or products of such life) but are not organic, as indications of things that were organic or having been around them?
Indeed I am curious at what depth you feel we can no longer refer to formations as what they appear to be when looked at at a surface depositional environment?
It is identifying a structure as a specific kind of depositional environment, which gives a strata in a well log a certain predictability such that one can make a connection to another well log, and estimate how it might end, or bend between points. It allows one to predict where a lens of some other material could exist between well log points.
Without the "fairy tale" that it formed in a specific way, one knows nothing except the point itself.

holmes
"...what a fool believes he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.."(D. Bros)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 119 by Faith, posted 08-10-2005 12:21 PM Faith has not replied

Silent H
Member (Idle past 5848 days)
Posts: 7405
From: satellite of love
Joined: 12-11-2002


Message 138 of 303 (232175)
08-11-2005 6:02 AM
Reply to: Message 130 by Faith
08-10-2005 8:27 PM


Oh be gneiss for once and actually read my posts
I am answering your last two replies in this one. I will also recommend that in the future you not try and answer my posts line by line. It seemed pretty obvious that you were not understanding what I was saying because of your chopping up my arguments.
I will try and be as concise as possible.
1) There are no straw men when I refer to "other methods". I'm not sure why you are not understanding what I am talking about. The hand book listed three methods. Two were essentially instrumental, and the third was mapmaking. They are all current and I am separating mapmaking from the "others". I am not disputing the others or putting them down in any way. Indeed I'd be one to argue that at this point modern instrumental methods might be superior in many cases. However where instrumental methods cannot be used or are inconclusive, mapmaking takes over.
2) There are no straw men when I discuss alternatives to OE paradigm for mapmaking. I discussed, and you now seem to acknowledge, that paradigms for what a formation's depositional environment was is useful to mapmaking. Now if you disagree that the OE paradigm is accurate and so a formation is not actually what geologists "say" it is, but just happens to look that way, then that still raises the question of what paradigm did it form under? What better paradigm should we be using? And if formations generally present challenges to depositional environments NECESSARY under YE assumptions, then some form of OE is in fact challenging YE, and geologists cannot work under, or claim to hold stock in YE theories.
3) I did understand what you were trying to describe, jettisoning theory from terminology for strata, and dealt with it in my post... where was your reply? Did you read my post throroughly? Your refusal to deal with my example resulted in you reasserting your position that "shoreline" is mere descriptive of rock type and not requiring any meaning beyond that. Let me try this again...
At the surface of a seashore we see a specific depositional environment, just as we see a different depositional environment inland, or by a meandering river, or in a desert, or under a volcanic ash cloud. Now I'll assume you have no problem in digging down and consulting maps over a number of decades and saying that the deposited material you see in those environments are really of those environments.
What geologists did was that same thing, sometimes nature favors the geologist and sections are exposed such that one doesn't even have to dig to see a history of that specific location over time. But in any case one can dig. The assumption is that when one finds similar characteristics at depth, that one finds at the surface and have no problem identifying, they should be considered the same. That is why we can talk about depositional environments at all, and use them to predict so as to make maps. It was not to promote an agenda regarding age, but to understand and predict what one would find elsewhere in a strata.
Let me use an example...
At a sea where we know from maps over the last few hundred years that the shore has moved out and then back in. We dig down and find a certain pattern left because when the sea was in it deposited certain material and when it was out other material was deposited, and we know because it was sedimentary deposition that the material would generally lay flat. Thus you get a naturally banded structure that should remain horizontal until deformed in some way, and with particular features at their boundaries.
When we find that at depth, but solidified through pressure and heat into stone, why are we to say that it is no longer actually a shoreline, and that we are instead looking at something else with conveniently similar characteristics but if not for OE assumptions, we could just as easily call it something else... like a "zoreline"?
There is a practical difference when it comes to mapmaking. If it is a shoreline then when we find the physical signs of a shoreline in a formation, but it is no longer horizontal, we can make predictions of what we will find it doing at depth. That is because a shoreline has (as we saw at the surface) a predictable natural pattern.
If it is a zoreline (built up by some wholly unknown process) then when we see it tilted, we have no way to know if it is really a zoreline at an angle or some new type of formation built up at that angle originally and thus might do anything as one moves down or across the strata. One loses the ability to predict outside of simply stating what conditions one has found in any particular location.
If you are about to argue that if it looks like a shoreline but at great depth, it is not really a shoreline but should be assumed to hold all manner of properties as a shoreline, including what one would expect due to deformation or alteration of a shoreline... then aren't you simply engaging in semantics?
If it looks like and acts like and should be assumeed to be for purposes of prediction in mapmaking, be something one finds at the surface and can identify, WHY are we supposed to believe it is anything different? And at what depth does this crossover occur, where something we can identify as a specific environment no longer can be considered that?
You claim that simply knowing the composition of rock within a strata will be useful for predicting what that strata will do over an area. Explain how that would be, when rock can form in so many different ways, and it is only the method of a strata's formation which indicates what a strata will do, specifically when compared to other strata.
This is not to mention incongruities or nonconformities. If depositional paradigms are removed, then there really is no such thing as an incongruity or nonconformity, as the real environment could have formed just as one sees it. Yet understanding features at depth as a place where something occured to an original structure to change it, is important.
Again, if you are going to say that nominally we should call it X (though it is really Y), because it looks like X, and it is useful for mapmaking assumptions to treat it as X, and if one sees something similar but not exact, one should not call it Z but treat it as X with something that occured to alter it because that has better predictive value... then why is it not really X?
This is a point where, it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, gave birth to more things that look like ducks, and made what amounts to a great duck dinner, but you insist that we are simply "calling it duck" for convenience but it is really something else. Doesn't you see that this is what you are doing?
4) I said that radioactive dating corroborated relative dating using other methods. You claim that that is contested. You are in error. The accuracy of radioactive dating to proving actual absolute ages of rock has been contested, even if one finds such contests rather silly. What has not been contested, as far as I have seen, that radioactive dates CORROBORATE the relative ages, which means strata X came before strata Y before strata Z. I would be amazed if you are about to advance a position that we cannot determine that relative age of strata, especially as you have already voiced agreement to the rules used to make such determinations.
5) A clarification:
But the other author didn't claim to be working for an oil company, he said he didn't get the job and went on to work for ICR didn't he?. So you mean THAT guy who didn't work for an oil company challenged THIS guy who claims he did lo these many years of supposed investigations into flood theory? Does this serve your purpose here? Doesn't this suggest that the guy who is obviously in the process of debunking flood theories was lying?
I guess I wasn't clear, though I guess this underlines that you do not bother reading cited sources. I assumed you would read it and so understand what I was saying.
Morris (the ICR guy who advanced a creo startegy to oil companies) claimed at the conference where Morton (the now ex-YEC person) was delivering his paper, that he himself was employed by an oil company. He did this when trying to challenge Morton about claims regarding geology in oil exploration creating real challenges to YEC models. Morton then blew his lie by asking him to name the company. Morris then had to admit he was not employed by oil companies.
It is not surprised that Morris did not mention his false claims and public depantsing in his article on trying to pitch a creo oil strategy to oil companies.
Now do you get what the problem is?
6) Atomic theory vs OE "theory"
nobody has any problem with any science that is testable and replicable like chemistry, only with far-out imaginative scenarios like the ToE and the geo time scale, that are glued onto the data rather than organically related to them.
But you can test the principles of geology, and there are organic (sometimes literally organic) relations to them. Go look at a seashore and what its sedimentary deposits create as strata as it moves in and out. Then look at what one finds as one keeps diggining down. And then you tell me at what depth you can no longer recognize what you are looking at, even if much more compressed and its bits glued together.
And if you have a problem with that, you tell me when you have seen with your own eyes subatomic or even atomic particles. Atomic theory is wholly theoretical compared to geology where you can actually get your hands on the material and identify objects.
This message has been edited by holmes, 08-11-2005 06:11 AM

holmes
"...what a fool believes he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.."(D. Bros)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 130 by Faith, posted 08-10-2005 8:27 PM Faith has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 139 by Wounded King, posted 08-11-2005 6:09 AM Silent H has replied
 Message 148 by Faith, posted 08-11-2005 8:06 AM Silent H has replied

Silent H
Member (Idle past 5848 days)
Posts: 7405
From: satellite of love
Joined: 12-11-2002


Message 140 of 303 (232177)
08-11-2005 6:13 AM
Reply to: Message 139 by Wounded King
08-11-2005 6:09 AM


Re: Oh be gneiss for once and actually read my posts
Enough with the geology puns already!!!
Sorry, but when things start getting this ridiculous I get an urge to be ridulous in my subtitles. I'll try and curb my mania.

holmes
"...what a fool believes he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.."(D. Bros)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 139 by Wounded King, posted 08-11-2005 6:09 AM Wounded King has not replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 142 by CK, posted 08-11-2005 6:31 AM Silent H has replied

Silent H
Member (Idle past 5848 days)
Posts: 7405
From: satellite of love
Joined: 12-11-2002


Message 143 of 303 (232183)
08-11-2005 6:39 AM
Reply to: Message 142 by CK
08-11-2005 6:31 AM


Re: Oh be gneiss for once and actually read my posts
Holmes - maybe you need to read your own signature?
Honestly, that is what it's there for. Kind of a mantra to remind myself that reason ends at some point and so a reasonable person should sometimes give up hope of finding any.
Alas, I am an optimist and an idealist.

holmes
"...what a fool believes he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.."(D. Bros)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 142 by CK, posted 08-11-2005 6:31 AM CK has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 147 by CK, posted 08-11-2005 6:50 AM Silent H has not replied

Silent H
Member (Idle past 5848 days)
Posts: 7405
From: satellite of love
Joined: 12-11-2002


Message 146 of 303 (232187)
08-11-2005 6:45 AM
Reply to: Message 141 by Faith
08-11-2005 6:21 AM


I'm denying only the entrenched IDEA THAT THEY REPRESENT ANCIENT SURFACE TOPOGRAPHY THAT LASTED MILLIONS OF YEARS. That they are "landscapes" *in a sense* is undisputed, though the term "landscape" is tendentious so I try to avoid it. That they were ever the surface topography of the planet for millions of years IS what is disputed, not that they actually exist as buried configurations that are describable in such terms.
This is the crux of your problem. Hopefully you will read and respond to my last post which tries to make this clear. Reading this reply of yours reminded me of another point you made and that was that the flood could exhibit seashores as it receded slowly.
The problem is that it is not just one recession and the amount of material deposited would be impossible without vast amounts of time, unless it was not a seashore at all.
The flood was 40 days and 40 nights. That isn't even 100s or thousands of years, and the Bible does not suggest the recession took that long either. If you are going to appeal to a seashore found at depth as having been the product of a flood receding, then you'll have to invent some form of miraculous deposition and retaining of form.

holmes
"...what a fool believes he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.."(D. Bros)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 141 by Faith, posted 08-11-2005 6:21 AM Faith has not replied

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