quote:
This is a good artical carbon dating, and other forms
The rate of decay of 14C is such that half of an amount will convert back to 14N in 5,730 years (plus or minus 40 years). This is the 'half-life.' So, in two half-lives, or 11,460 years, only one-quarter of that in living organisms at present, then it has a theoretical age of 11,460 years. Anything over about 50,000 years old, should theoretically have no detectable 14C left. That is why radiocarbon dating cannot give millions of years. In fact, if a sample contains 14C, it is good evidence that it is not millions of years old.
I'm not a world expert on carbon dating, but you'd think someone writing a scientific article would know that you can keep cutting something in half over and over again without ever running out of it.
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Dan Carroll