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Author Topic:   The Geologic Column
mark24
Member (Idle past 5225 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 13 of 68 (4400)
02-13-2002 12:39 PM
Reply to: Message 1 by redstang281
02-12-2002 10:39 PM


quote:
Originally posted by redstang281:
When the concept of the geologic column was first established, how did they know what dates to give each layer?
To bring you back on track, Redstang is asking how rock strata was dated BEFORE radiometric dating methods were used.
I confess, I'm interested also.
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 1 by redstang281, posted 02-12-2002 10:39 PM redstang281 has not replied

mark24
Member (Idle past 5225 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 20 of 68 (4426)
02-13-2002 5:05 PM
Reply to: Message 14 by redstang281
02-13-2002 4:18 PM


quote:
Originally posted by redstang281:
I'd have to agree.
Now honestly speaking, how in the world could we imagine they got those dates right? What basis do we have to test them by today?
Every known dating method gives such a wild range of numbers so evolutionist only pick the numbers that fit the preconceived notion on what age of the geologic column's layers represent.

Although I'm interested in this question. That radiometric dating methods NORMALLY give a wild range of numbers is just plain wrong.
Unfortunately I can't credit who originally posted this, but thanks:
Radiometric Dating (shortened the link, was causing display problems, --Percy)
"The purpose of this paper is to describe briefly a few typical radiometric dating studies, out of hundreds of possible examples documented in the scientific literature, in which the ages are validated by other available information. I have selected four examples from recent literature, mostly studies involving my work and that of a few close colleagues because it was easy to do so. I could have selected many more examples but then this would have turned into a book rather than the intended short paper.
The Manson Meteorite Impact and the Pierre Shale
In the Cretaceous Period, a large meteorite struck the earth at a location near the present town of Manson, Iowa. The heat of the impact melted some of the feldspar crystals in the granitic rocks of the impact zone, thereby resetting their internal radiometric clocks. These melted crystals, and therefore the impact, have been dated by the 40Ar/39Ar method at 74.1 Ma (million years; Izett and others 1998), but that is not the whole story by a long shot. The impact also created shocked quartz crystals that were blasted into the air and subsequently fell to the west into the inland sea that occupied much of central North America at that time. Today this shocked quartz is found in South Dakota, Colorado, and Nebraska in a thin layer (the Crow Creek Member) within a thick rock formation known as the Pierre Shale. The Pierre Shale, which is divided into identifiable sedimentary beds called members, also contains abundant fossils of numerous species of ammonites, ancestors of the chambered nautilus. The fossils, when combined with geologic mapping, allow the various exposed sections of the Pierre Shale to be pieced together in their proper relative positions to form a complete composite section (Figure 1). The Pierre Shale also contains volcanic ash that was erupted from volcanoes and then fell into the sea, where it was preserved as thin beds. These ash beds, called bentonites, contain sanidine feldspar and biotite that has been dated using the 40Ar/39Ar technique. The results of the Manson Impact/Pierre Shale dating study (Izett and others 1998) are shown in Figure 1. There are three important things to note about these results. First, each age is based on numerous measurements; laboratory errors, had there been any, would be readily apparent. Second, ages were measured on two very different minerals, sanidine and biotite, from several of the ash beds. The largest difference between these mineral pairs, in the ash from the Gregory Member, is less than 1%. Third, the radiometric ages agree, within analytical error, with the relative positions of the dated ash beds as determined by the geologic mapping and the fossil assemblages; that is, the ages get older from top to bottom as they should. Finally, the inferred age of the shocked quartz, as determined from the age of the melted feldspar in the Manson impact structure (74.1 0.1 Ma), is in very good agreement with the ages of the ash beds above and below it. How could all of this be so if the 40Ar/39Ar dating technique did not work?
The Ages of Meteorites
Meteorites, most of which are fragments of asteroids, are very interesting objects to study because they provide important evidence about the age, composition, and history of the early solar system. There are many types of meteorites. Some are from primitive asteroids whose material is little modified since they formed from the early solar nebula. Others are from larger asteroids that got hot enough to melt and send lava flows to the surface. A few are even from the Moon and Mars. The most primitive type of meteorites are called chondrites, because they contain little spheres of olivine crystals known as chondrules. Because of their importance, meteorites have been extensively dated radiometrically; the vast majority appear to be 4.4—4.6 Ga (billion years) old. Some meteorites, because of their mineralogy, can be dated by more than one radiometric dating technique, which provides scientists with a powerful check of the validity of the results. The results from three meteorites are shown in Table 1. Many more, plus a discussion of the different types of meteorites and their origins, can be found in Dalrymple (1991). There are 3 important things to know about the ages in Table 1. The first is that each meteorite was dated by more than one laboratory Allende by 2 laboratories, Guarena by 2 laboratories, and St Severin by four laboratories. This pretty much eliminates any significant laboratory biases or any major analytical mistakes. The second thing is that some of the results have been repeated using the same technique, which is another check against analytical errors. The third is that all three meteorites were dated by more than one method two methods each for Allende and Guarena, and four methods for St Severin. This is extremely powerful verification of the validity of both the theory and practice of radiometric dating. In the case of St Severin, for example, we have 4 different natural clocks (actually 5, for the Pb-Pb method involves 2 different radioactive uranium isotopes), each running at a different rate and each using elements that respond to chemical and physical conditions in much different ways. And yet, they all give the same result to within a few percent. Is this a remarkable coincidence? Scientists have concluded that it is not; it is instead a consequence of the fact that radiometric dating actually works and works quite well. Creationists who wants to dispute the conclusion that primitive meteorites, and therefore the solar system, are about 4.5 Ga old certainly have their work cut out for them!
The K-T Tektites
One of the most exciting and important scientific findings in decades was the 1980 discovery that a large asteroid, about 10 kilometers diameter, struck the earth at the end of the Cretaceous Period. The collision threw many tons of debris into the atmosphere and possibly led to the extinction of the dinosaurs and many other life forms. The fallout from this enormous impact, including shocked quartz and high concentrations of the element iridium, has been found in sedimentary rocks at more than 100 locations worldwide at the precise stratigraphic location of the Cretaceous-Tertiary (K-T) boundary (Alvarez and Asaro 1990; Alvarez 1998). We now know that the impact site is located on the Yucatan Peninsula. Measuring the age of this impact event independently of the stratigraphic evidence is an obvious test for radiometric methods, and a number of scientists in laboratories around the world set to work. In addition to shocked quartz grains and high concentrations of iridium, the K-T impact produced tektites, which are small glass spherules that form from rock that is instantaneously melted by a large impact. The K-T tektites were ejected into the atmosphere and deposited some distance away. Tektites are easily recognizable and form in no other way, so the discovery of a sedimentary bed (the Beloc Formation) in Haiti that contained tektites and that, from fossil evidence, coincided with the K-T boundary provided an obvious candidate for dating. Scientists from the US Geological Survey were the first to obtain radiometric ages for the tektites and laboratories in Berkeley, Stanford, Canada, and France soon followed suit. The results from all of the laboratories were remarkably consistent with the measured ages ranging only from 64.4 to 65.1 Ma (Table 2). Similar tektites were also found in Mexico, and the Berkeley lab found that they were the same age as the Haiti tektites. But the story doesn’t end there. The K-T boundary is recorded in numerous sedimentary beds around the world. The Z-coal, the Ferris coal, and the Nevis coal in Montana and Saskatchewan all occur immediately above the K-T boundary. Numerous thin beds of volcanic ash occur within these coals just centimeters above the K-T boundary, and some of these ash beds contain minerals that can be dated radiometrically. Ash beds from each of these coals have been dated by 40Ar/39Ar, K-Ar, Rb-Sr, and U-Pb methods in several laboratories in the US and Canada. Since both the ash beds and the tektites occur either at or very near the K-T boundary, as determined by diagnostic fossils, the tektites and the ash beds should be very nearly the same age, and they are (Table 2). There are several important things to note about these results. First, the Cretaceous and Tertiary periods were defined by geologists in the early 1800s. The boundary between these periods (the K-T boundary) is marked by an abrupt change in fossils found in sedimentary rocks worldwide. Its exact location in the stratigraphic column at any locality has nothing to do with radiometric dating it is located by careful study of the fossils and the rocks that contain them, and nothing more. Second, the radiometric age measurements, 187 of them, were made on 3 different minerals and on glass by 3 distinctly different dating methods (K-Ar and 40Ar/39Ar are technical variations that use the same parent-daughter decay scheme), each involving different elements with different half-lives. Furthermore, the dating was done in 6 different laboratories and the materials were collected from 5 different locations in the Western Hemisphere. And yet the results are the same within analytical error. If radiometric dating didn’t work then such beautifully consistent results would not be possible.
Dating of The Mt Vesuvius Eruption
In the early afternoon of August 24, 79 CE, Mt Vesuvius erupted violently, sending hot ash flows speeding down its flanks. These flows buried and destroyed Pompeii and other nearby Roman cities. We know the exact day of this eruption because Pliny the Younger carefully recorded the event. In 1997 a team of scientists from the Berkeley Geochronology Center and the University of Naples decided to see if the 40Ar/39Ar method of radiometric dating could accurately measure the age of this very young (by geological standards) volcanic material. They separated sanidine crystals from a sample of one of the ash flows. Incremental heating experiments on 12 samples of sanidine yielded 46 data points that resulted in an isochron age of 1925 94 years. The actual age of the flow in 1997 was 1918 years. Is this just a coincidence? No it is the result of extremely careful analyses using a technique that works. This is not the only dating study to be done on an historic lava flow. Two extensive studies done more than 25 years ago involved analyzing the isotopic composition of argon in such flows to determine if the source of the argon was atmospheric, as must be assumed in K-Ar dating (Dalrymple 1969, 26 flows; Krummenacher 1970, 19 flows). Both studies detected, in a few of the flows, deviations from atmospheric isotopic composition, most often in the form of excess 40Ar. The majority of flows, however, had no detectable excess 40Ar and thus gave correct ages as expected. Of the handful of flows that did contain excess 40Ar, only a few did so in significant amounts. The 122 BCE flow from Mt Etna, for example, gave an erroneous age of 0.25 0.08 Ma. Note, however, that even an error of 0.25 Ma would be insignificant in a 20 Ma flow with equivalent potassium content. Austin (1996) has documented excess 40Ar in the 1986 dacite flow from Mount St Helens, but the amounts are insufficient to produce significant errors in all but the youngest rocks. The 79 CE Mt Vesuvius flow, the dating of which is described above, also contained excess 40Ar. The 40Ar/39Ar isochron method used by the Berkeley scientists, however, does not require any assumptions about the composition of the argon trapped in the rock when it formed it may be atmospheric or any other composition for that matter. Thus any potential error due to excess 40Ar was eliminated by the use of this technique, which was not available when the studies by Dalrymple (1969) and Krummenacher (1970) were done. Thus the large majority of historic lava flows that have been studied either give correct ages, as expected, or have quantities of excess radiogenic 40Ar that would be insignificant in all but the youngest rocks. The 40Ar/39Ar technique, which is now used instead of K-Ar methods for most studies, has the capability of automatically detecting, and in many instances correcting for, the presence of excess 40Ar, should it be present.
Summary
In this short paper I have briefly described 4 examples of radiometric dating studies where there is both internal and independent evidence that the results have yielded valid ages for significant geologic events. It is these studies, and the many more like them documented in the scientific literature, that the creationists need to address before they can discredit radiometric dating. Their odds of success are near zero. Even if against all odds they should succeed, it still would not prove that the Earth is young. Only when young-earth creationists produce convincing quantitative, scientific evidence that the earth is young will they be worth listening to on this important scientific matter."
So the K-T Tectites were dated by no less than four methods, that corroborate. 40Ar/39Ar, K-Ar, Rb-Sr, and U-Pb . If that weren't evidence enough, lets take a look at how innacurate they all must be, to fit a YEC world view. I'll assume, for the sake of simplicity that the K-T boundary is 60 mya, not 65 mya. Now, assuming a 6,000 year old YEC earth. This means that all the above methods, were ALL 1,000,000% innacurate. Let me reiterate, the YEC movement requires these FOUR different, corroberating methods to be ONE MILLION PERCENT INNACURATE. Thats all of them innacurate by the same amount.
How can you explain such a colossal error in four separate methods, when radioactive decay rates are so constant?
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.
[This message has been edited by Percipient, 02-13-2002]

This message is a reply to:
 Message 14 by redstang281, posted 02-13-2002 4:18 PM redstang281 has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 35 by redstang281, posted 02-14-2002 3:52 PM mark24 has replied

mark24
Member (Idle past 5225 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 26 of 68 (4436)
02-13-2002 6:57 PM
Reply to: Message 21 by Percy
02-13-2002 5:33 PM


Percy,
I saw you shortened my link in message 20. How do you do that?
Thanks,
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 21 by Percy, posted 02-13-2002 5:33 PM Percy has not replied

Replies to this message:
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mark24
Member (Idle past 5225 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 37 of 68 (4522)
02-14-2002 5:50 PM
Reply to: Message 35 by redstang281
02-14-2002 3:52 PM


Redstang,
In addition to Joz,
It still doesn't explain why a single method is so consistent.
If ONE method is so poor, why do three other methods corroberate it so consistently?
I repeat:
"So the K-T Tectites were dated by no less than four methods, that corroborate. 40Ar/39Ar, K-Ar, Rb-Sr, and U-Pb . If that weren't evidence enough, lets take a look at how innacurate they all must be, to fit a YEC world view. I'll assume, for the sake of simplicity that the K-T boundary is 60 mya, not 65 mya. Now, assuming a 6,000 year old YEC earth. This means that all the above methods, were ALL 1,000,000% innacurate. Let me reiterate, the YEC movement requires these FOUR different, corroberating methods to be ONE MILLION PERCENT INNACURATE. Thats all of them innacurate by the same amount."
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 35 by redstang281, posted 02-14-2002 3:52 PM redstang281 has not replied

Replies to this message:
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mark24
Member (Idle past 5225 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 41 of 68 (4550)
02-15-2002 5:53 AM
Reply to: Message 35 by redstang281
02-14-2002 3:52 PM


Redstang,
http://home.mmcable.com/harlequin/evol/lies/lie024.html
At this site you will find a complete rebuttal.
Unfortunately I can't post a relevant paragraph as the whole page is relevant. It is a paragraph by paragraph rebuttal.
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.
[This message has been edited by mark24, 02-15-2002]

This message is a reply to:
 Message 35 by redstang281, posted 02-14-2002 3:52 PM redstang281 has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 43 by redstang281, posted 02-15-2002 8:34 AM mark24 has replied
 Message 54 by redstang281, posted 02-15-2002 11:39 AM mark24 has replied

mark24
Member (Idle past 5225 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 44 of 68 (4566)
02-15-2002 8:47 AM
Reply to: Message 42 by redstang281
02-15-2002 8:27 AM


I provided a link to the site I was quoting.
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.
[This message has been edited by mark24, 02-15-2002]

This message is a reply to:
 Message 42 by redstang281, posted 02-15-2002 8:27 AM redstang281 has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 45 by redstang281, posted 02-15-2002 8:49 AM mark24 has replied

mark24
Member (Idle past 5225 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 46 of 68 (4569)
02-15-2002 8:52 AM
Reply to: Message 43 by redstang281
02-15-2002 8:34 AM


quote:
Originally posted by redstang281:
Mark, can you say honestly that you really understand this dating method and all the inner workings of it?

Pretty much, I studied radioactive decay TWICE to A level standard in chemistry & physics. The premise is pretty simple once the decay series is understood, along with half life times. All you then have to do is read up on the various methods.
The question is, do you understand it?
If you haven't formally studied radioactive decay (at least), then you are going to struggle a bit. Nothing wrong with that, of course.
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 43 by redstang281, posted 02-15-2002 8:34 AM redstang281 has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 51 by redstang281, posted 02-15-2002 11:17 AM mark24 has not replied

mark24
Member (Idle past 5225 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 48 of 68 (4584)
02-15-2002 9:53 AM
Reply to: Message 45 by redstang281
02-15-2002 8:49 AM


quote:
Originally posted by redstang281:
I'm not insulting you, I'm just asking are we engaging in a search and find debate here?

A "search & find debate" is not the issue. If I have found a rebuttle to your claims then it's entirely reasonable that I post them. You need to adress what was posted, not how the information was come by.
Do you understand why your original post by Snelling is incorrect? One reason that (large extrusion) basaltic sample may be suspect is that if they cool too quickly, the cooled outer surface becomes impervious to Argon, excess Argon can't ecape from the main body of lava, trapping it & giving a false measurement. In most other cases Argon involving methods work very well, thank you very much. The traditional creationist tack is to extrapolate this into meaning ALL methods are suspect, using ALL samples.
Even individual bad results that don't conform, don't destroy radiometric dating as a method. If I gave you a tape measure & asked you to measure 100 things, it's entirely possible you would make an honest mistake. Does that mean that rulers are poor tools for measuring things? Of course not.
I have shown four methods that all corobborate to a high degree, plus shown how they must all be innacurate to the tune of 1,000,000 % to maintain the YEC position. Do you realise how vanishingly small a chance this represents? So, what is the reason for denying radiometric methods as a whole? None, It is simply an unreasonable denial of the weight of evidence that YECs must undertake to maintain their 6,000 year old earth.
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 45 by redstang281, posted 02-15-2002 8:49 AM redstang281 has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 53 by redstang281, posted 02-15-2002 11:25 AM mark24 has not replied

mark24
Member (Idle past 5225 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 56 of 68 (4643)
02-15-2002 5:50 PM
Reply to: Message 54 by redstang281
02-15-2002 11:39 AM


quote:
Originally posted by redstang281:
The the vary name of this site; "Creationist Lies and Blunders"; is Ad Hominem. He's calling creationists liars right from the beginning.

He is calling creationists liars, & in this case, with good reason. Here’s ONE reason.
Snelling,
For more than three decades potassium-argon (K-Ar) and argon-argon (Ar-Ar) dating of rocks has been crucial in underpinning the billions of years for Earth history claimed by evolutionists. Critical to these dating methods is the assumption that there was no radiogenic argon (40Ar*) in the rocks (e.g., basalt) when they formed, which is usually stated as self-evident.
Dalrymple argues strongly:
The K-Ar method is the only decay scheme that can be used with little or no concern for the initial presence of the daughter isotope. This is because 40Ar is an inert gas that does not combine chemically with any other element and so escapes easily from rocks when they are heated. Thus, while a rock is molten, the 40Ar formed by the decay of 40K escapes from the liquid.1
However, this dogmatic statement is inconsistent with even Dalrymple’s own work 25 years earlier on 26 historic, subaerial lava flows, 20% of which he found had non-zero concentrations of 40Ar* (or excess argon) in violation of this key assumption of the K-Ar dating method.2
Dalrymples text was from 1991, Snellings was from 1999.
Snelling DELIBERATELY set out to deceive. We call it lying.
Also of relevance to daughter (Ar) isotopes being present in young lava.
Now let’s look at a real life example. 40Ar/39Ar Dating into the Historical Realm: Calibration Against Pliny the Younger was written by P. R. Renne et. al. and published in Science 277: 1279-1280 (1997). They tested Ar-Ar dating by checking it against the 79 A.D. eruption of Vesuvius that is famous for destroying Pompeii. Now they note that Analysis of single crystals, for example by laser fusion, can obviate xenocrystic contamination, but single crystals are seldom large enough to yield measurable quantities of 40Ar* through radiogenic ingrowth in the Holocene [i.e. last 12,000 years]. Would Ar-Ar work such recent material?
It did. They got an age of 192594 years. The true age was 1918 years when the test was done. The test was off only 7 years and was correct within the margin of error. Seven years is only 0.36% of the true age. The reported margin of error for the measurement was a bit under five percent of the true age.
Not bad for a method you are inferring is 1,000,000% inaccurate?
quote:
Originally posted by redstang281:
They are trying for a rebuttal but regardless of that; the fact is that Ar-Ar can produce ages that even evolutionists would admit are ridiculously old.

Please produce some non-creationist, scientific literature that shows most Ar-Ar results show incorrect ages, because Dalrymple strongly disagrees.
quote:
Originally posted by redstang281:

The following website describes this method.
http://www.ees.nmt.edu/Geol/labs/Argon_Lab/Methods/Methods.html
Note this quote:
Standard Intercalibration - In order for an age to be calculated by the 40Ar/39Ar technique, the J parameter must be known. For the J to be determined, a standard of known age must be irradiated with the samples of unknown age. Because this (primary) standard ultimately cannot be determined by 40Ar/39Ar, it must be first determined by another isotopic dating method. The method most commonly used to date the primary standard is the conventional K/Ar technique.
They use a sample of "know age" to find J for the samples of unknown age. The key is the fact that use K-Ar dating to determine this "known age". Why? There are plenty of lava flows around the world with real historically known ages so why not use them? The only logical reason is that the "known" must close to the expected age, based on the geologic column, so that the result is calibrated to the geologic column.

39Ar (K) can only be produced by a fast neutron reaction on 39K. This means that 39Ar is a product of 39K. So, the primary standard can only be derived from a potassium source.
quote:
Originally posted by redstang281:

http://www.ees.nmt.edu/Geol/labs/Argon_Lab/Data/Tables.html
This page has a table of data from an actual sample set note that with the exception of 'A' they all have "ages" from 59-64 Ma. 'A' still has an "age" of 29 Ma. It doesn't give any information about the standard.
I suspect that if historically known ages worked for a standard on all samples they would use them to give the method more credibility. Since they don't use standards of historically known age, it has probably been shown that such dates don't fit the geologic column.

1/ What do you mean by standard?
2/ A 90% accuracy rate isn’t good enough for you? Now be honest, which one do you think is most likely to be in error? Nine samples are EXTREMELY close, how do you explain this? Are you seriously telling me that the method should be scrapped because 1 in 10 results didn’t conform?
I’ve said this before, but if I gave you a ruler & asked you to measure the length of 10 things, & you got one wrong, would you discard rulers as being an inaccurate tool for measuring?
I repeat:
"So the K-T Tectites were dated by no less than four methods, that corroborate. 40Ar/39Ar, K-Ar, Rb-Sr, and U-Pb . If that weren't evidence enough, lets take a look at how innacurate they all must be, to fit a YEC world view. I'll assume, for the sake of simplicity that the K-T boundary is 60 mya, not 65 mya. Now, assuming a 6,000 year old YEC earth. This means that all the above methods, were ALL 1,000,000% innacurate. Let me reiterate, the YEC movement requires these FOUR different, corroberating methods to be ONE MILLION PERCENT INNACURATE. Thats all of them innacurate by the same amount."
Can you explain the correlation?
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.
[This message has been edited by mark24, 02-15-2002]

This message is a reply to:
 Message 54 by redstang281, posted 02-15-2002 11:39 AM redstang281 has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 59 by redstang281, posted 02-19-2002 1:59 PM mark24 has replied

mark24
Member (Idle past 5225 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 63 of 68 (5090)
02-19-2002 5:21 PM
Reply to: Message 59 by redstang281
02-19-2002 1:59 PM


Firstly, please answer this from message 20
I repeat:
"So the K-T Tectites were dated by no less than four methods, that corroborate. 40Ar/39Ar, K-Ar, Rb-Sr, and U-Pb . If that weren't evidence enough, lets take a look at how innacurate they all must be, to fit a YEC world view. I'll assume, for the sake of simplicity that the K-T boundary is 60 mya, not 65 mya. Now, assuming a 6,000 year old YEC earth. This means that all the above methods, were ALL 1,000,000% innacurate. Let me reiterate, the YEC movement requires these FOUR different, corroberating methods to be ONE MILLION PERCENT INNACURATE. Thats all of them innacurate by the same amount."
Can you explain the correlation?
quote:
Originally posted by redstang281:

Can you show me were they have dated strata and found and increase in "age" with depth from the same area as an accurate dating of a historically known item?

How can something be 65 million years old & be historically known? It is prehistoric by definition.
If you mean have there been datings of particular sections of the geologic column, showing increased ages with depth, then yes. Not only that, but in this example they correlate with ammonite marker fossils. Meaning the dates given below corroborate with other dates elsewhere containing those same fossils.
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/dating.html
"By contrast, the example presented here is a geologically simple situation -- it consists of several primary (i.e. not redeposited) volcanic ash deposits with a diverse dateable mineral assemblage (multiple minerals and methods are possible), found in fossil-bearing sedimentary rocks in western North America. It demonstrates how consistent radiometric data can be when the rocks are more suitable for dating. For most geological samples like this, radiometric dating "just works". Consider this stratigraphic section from the Bearpaw Formation of Saskatchewan, Canada (Baadsgaard et al., 1993):
Figure 3. Lithostratigraphy (i.e. the sedimentary rocks), biostratigraphy (fossils) and radiometric dates from the Bearpaw Formation, southern Saskatchewan, Canada. Modified from Baadsgaard et al., 1993. The section is measured in metres, starting with 0m at the bottom (oldest).
About 40 of these ammonite zones are used to subdivide the upper part of the Cretaceous Period in this area. Dinosaurs and many other types of fossils are also found in this interval, and in broad context it occurs shortly before the extinction of the dinosaurs, and the extinction of all ammonites. The Bearpaw Formation is a marine unit that occurs over much of Alberta and Saskatchewan, and it continues into Montana and North Dakota in the United States, although it adopts a different name in the U.S. (the Pierre Shale), mainly for historical and political reasons, rather than any great geological difference.
The uppermost ash bed, dated by three independent methods (K/Ar, U/Pb, and Rb/Sr), and from as many as three different minerals (felspar, biotite, and zircon), yields a date of about 72.5 +- 0.4 million years ago (Ma) (weighted mean of several analyses. The numbers above are just summary values). The results for the lower ash bed, although not as complete as for the upper ash bed (only the Rb/Sr isochron method -- the U/Pb isochron was discordant, indicating the minerals did not preserve the date), give the expected result from superpositional relationships -- it is older by about a million years (73.65 +- 0.59 Ma), taking the mean values.
Other examples yield similar results - i.e. compatible with the expectations from the stratigraphy. For example, Baadsgaard and Lerbekmo (1988) dated the age of the Cretaceous-Tertiary (K/T) boundary using three methods (K/Ar, Rb/Sr, and U/Pb, again using multiple minerals) at three localities in the U.S. and Canada. Theoretically, the K/T boundary should be younger than the Baculites reesidei zone mentioned above, because the K/T boundary occurs stratigraphically above this level in the same area and globally. The result? 64.3+-1.2 million years ago is the weighted average from the three localities, and almost all the results are within 1 million years of each other. The results are therefore highly consistent given the analytical uncertainties in any measurement.
Eberth and Braman (1990) described the vertebrate paleontology and sedimentology of the Judith River Formation, a dinosaur-bearing unit that occurs stratigraphically below the Baculites reesidei zone (the Judith River Formation is below the Bearpaw Formation). It should therefore be older than the results from Baadsgaard et al. (1993). An ash bed near the top of the Judith River Fm. yields a date of 76.11+-0.22 million years ago, while one almost 100m lower yields a date of 78.2+-0.2 million years ago (Eberth and Braman, 1990, figure 5). Again, this is compatible with the age determined for the Baculites reesidei zone and its relative stratigraphic position, and even with the relative position of the two samples within the same formation."
I have answered all of your questions on this thread, & repeatedly asked you to answer the question at the top of this post. All I have got is more questions. So come on now, your turn.
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 59 by redstang281, posted 02-19-2002 1:59 PM redstang281 has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 66 by redstang281, posted 02-20-2002 10:56 AM mark24 has not replied

mark24
Member (Idle past 5225 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 68 of 68 (5165)
02-20-2002 12:42 PM


quote:
Originally posted by redstang281:

All dating methods are collaborated with the geologic column so it doesn't prove much to me.

So why did you ask me to provide an example? Because asking a question is easier than asking the question I have asked of you THREE TIMES?
Different dating methods corroborate EACH other, not the geologic column. Given the KNOWN accuracy (vesuvius) of Ar-Ar, it is entirely reasonable to apply the method to the geologic column. You may not like the results, of course, but it is for you to explain why Ar-Ar dating was wrong by ONLY SEVEN YEARS with regard to the vesuvius eruption (less than 1%, the range given is 5%, if my memory serves), but is to be considered innacurate as a method.
quote:
Originally posted by redstang281:
Basically they assume the geologic column was established with the correct dates.

Rubbish. The various methods are applied to the geologic column, & produce consistant results.
Why the consistancy between different methods?
quote:
Originally posted by redstang281:

So the claim that 40ar/39ar dating has given the correct date for "the 79 A.D. eruption of Vesuvius that is famous for destroying Pompeii" may be in fact true. But I have a hard time believing the collaboration for 40ar/39ar in that instance was based off the geologic column. I would like to see them date the rock below the eruption of vesuvious and see what dates 40ar/39ar would show.

The "corroboration" for Ar-Ar dating wasn't taken from the geologic column. For the purposes of this discussion, it was from the vesuvius eruption, & the highly concordant & corroborative results of different methods.
I've given you an example of the geologic column dating older the deeper you go, asking for ages beneath vesuvius' ash is irrelevant & evasive. The method has been SHOWN to work.
Let me repeat, Ar-Ar dating HAS BEEN SHOWN TO BE ACCURATE! In samples with excess argon, no less.
So, back to my original question. Please, no more evasions by posing more questions.
I repeat:
"So the K-T Tectites were dated by no less than four methods, that corroborate. 40Ar/39Ar, K-Ar, Rb-Sr, and U-Pb . If that weren't evidence enough, lets take a look at how innacurate they all must be, to fit a YEC world view. I'll assume, for the sake of simplicity that the K-T boundary is 60 mya, not 65 mya. Now, assuming a 6,000 year old YEC earth. This means that all the above methods, were ALL 1,000,000% innacurate. Let me reiterate, the YEC movement requires these FOUR different, corroberating methods to be ONE MILLION PERCENT INNACURATE. Thats all of them innacurate by the sam

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