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Author Topic:   Buz's refutation of all radiometric dating methods
mark24
Member (Idle past 5223 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 18 of 269 (43722)
06-23-2003 5:11 AM
Reply to: Message 15 by Buzsaw
06-23-2003 12:33 AM


Buz,
This is something I cooked up a while ago, I have yet to receive a response from YECs.
Radiometeric_Dating_Does_Work [Added by edit: The URL is not valid at the time of posting, the quote is Brent Dalrymple]
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.
1/
So the K-T Tektites 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 inaccurate they all must be, to fit a YEC world view. The lower age given is 64.4 mya. Now, assuming a 6,000 year old YEC earth is what YECs perceive as 100% of available time, then 60 years is 1%. This means that all the above methods, were ALL (1,085,000-100 = ) 1,084,900% inaccurate. Let me reiterate, the YECs requires these FOUR different, corroborating methods to be over ONE MILLION PERCENT INNACURATE.
Now, given that the four methods are different, & are subject to DIFFERENT potential error sources & yet still corroborate closely means that the various potential bugbears of each method have been reasonably accounted for in the date calculations themselves. This can only leave a YEC one place to go, the underlying physics. Half life constancy.
2/
The range of dates is from 64.4 mya to 65.1 mya giving a 0.7 my range.
64.4/0.7 = 92 (Not taking the 65.1 m.y. figure to be as favourable as possible to YECs)
The range of error is 92 times smaller than the minimum given date, giving us usable increments of time. Probabilistically speaking, we basically have four 92 sided dice. What are the odds of all four dice rolling a 92? On the familiar 6 sided die, the chance of rolling two sixes (or any two numbers, for that matter) is 6^2 = 36:1 (Number of sides to the nth power where nth = number of die).
Therefore, the odds of four radiometric dating methods reaching the same date range by chance is..drum roll..
92^4 (92*92*92*92)= 71,639,296:1
Is there any YEC that is prepared to state that the four radiometric dating methods achieve their high level of corroboration by pure chance?
If not, how much of the 65 m.y. old figure do you attribute to chance, & how much to radiometric half lives contributing to the derived date, percentage wise?
Here is your dilemma. The error required by the radiometric methods are 1,084,900% to fit a YEC 6,000 year old view. If they accept that the methods are capable of not being in error by more than 1,084,000%, then they accept a 60,000 year old earth, minimum. So, saying that half lives contribute only 1% to any derived radiometric date, means in this case (1% of 65,000,000 is 650,000 years), so even this small contribution by half lives falsifies a YEC young earth.
3/
The chance of all four methods being off by (chance) 64,400,000 years when the result SHOULD have been 6,000 years is truly staggering.
64,400,000/6,000 = 10,733.33 recurring (following the previous example, we now have four 10,733.33 sided dice)
10,733.33 recurring ^4 = 13,272,064,019,753,086:1
My questions to creationists are ;
A/ How do you account for four corroborating radiometric dating methods dating the tektites so closely at 65 m.y. old, given the odds of it occurring by pure chance?
B/ IF you don’t accept that radiometric dating is valid as a dating method, how do you account for the four methods being over one million percent inaccurate, relative to a YEC assumed 6,000 year old earth?
C/ If you DO accept that half lives affect the resultant date, even to a small degree, what percentage would you be prepared to accept that radiometric dating is influenced by half lives, the rest being just plain chance? And how do you come by this figure, evidentially?
D/ How do you rationalise the odds of all four radiometric methods being wrong by a factor of 10,733 each, when the odds of such an occurrence is 13,272,064,019,753,086:1 of them being wrong by the same factor?
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.
[This message has been edited by mark24, 06-23-2003]

This message is a reply to:
 Message 15 by Buzsaw, posted 06-23-2003 12:33 AM Buzsaw has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 21 by Buzsaw, posted 06-23-2003 11:46 PM mark24 has replied
 Message 42 by Buzsaw, posted 06-25-2003 1:30 AM mark24 has replied

  
mark24
Member (Idle past 5223 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 26 of 269 (43884)
06-24-2003 5:02 AM
Reply to: Message 21 by Buzsaw
06-23-2003 11:46 PM


Buz,
I have never stated that the earth is a young earth
Irrelevant.
You did state that radiometric dating was unreliable, however. Please address the issues I raise in message 18.
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 21 by Buzsaw, posted 06-23-2003 11:46 PM Buzsaw has not replied

  
mark24
Member (Idle past 5223 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 35 of 269 (43991)
06-24-2003 8:19 PM
Reply to: Message 28 by Buzsaw
06-24-2003 11:24 AM


Buz,
If I bury a dead carcas in the earth, that doesn't make it the same age as the earth.
What large surface organisms bury themselves in consolidated rock before they die?
The mighty sauropods managed to dig down through 150 my of rock in order to die, I guess dieing on the surface just wasn't fashionable back then.
Do you realise how ridiculous your shoehorning of data makes you look?
Early cetaceans, I'm thinking Basilosaurus here, managed to dig, DIG(!!!!) down tens of millions of years of sediment in order to croak. The mighty Tyranosaurs dug through 65 million years of sedimentary rock to die. The trilobites dug through 250 million years of sedimentary rock to die, right? If an igneous rock dates 70 mya, & another layer above dates 60 mya, what makes you think the T.Rex fossilised inbetween is ~4,500 years old?
Isn't a more sensible explanation that the fossils are the age of the rocks, bioturbation aside? If you died atop 65 my old rocks & were lucky enough to become fossilised, you would be encased in Holocene sediments, not Cretaceous.
I'm still waiting on a substantive response to this, please.
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 28 by Buzsaw, posted 06-24-2003 11:24 AM Buzsaw has not replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 36 by Coragyps, posted 06-24-2003 8:40 PM mark24 has not replied

  
mark24
Member (Idle past 5223 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 52 of 269 (44086)
06-25-2003 5:19 AM
Reply to: Message 42 by Buzsaw
06-25-2003 1:30 AM


Buz,
Mark, would you like to comment on this statement?
Sure, but others beat me to it..... The K-T boundary is defined by life, or more specifically, fossils of living things, not the Iridium layer or tektites. This doesn't alter the FACT that tektites occur at the K-T boundary as defined by the fossils. It is therefore reasonable that dating the tektites found at that fossil boundary, also dates the boundary, right?
This is still an irrelevant point, the point of message 18 wasn't supposed to be about dating XXX layer in the geologic column, but to show the fantastic corroboration of different dating methods, it was serendipity that Dalrymples methods also dated rocks at the K-T boundary.
Now, do you, or do you not, have any substantive response to message 18, & message 35?
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.
[This message has been edited by mark24, 06-25-2003]

This message is a reply to:
 Message 42 by Buzsaw, posted 06-25-2003 1:30 AM Buzsaw has not replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 53 by IrishRockhound, posted 06-25-2003 10:08 AM mark24 has not replied

  
mark24
Member (Idle past 5223 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 64 of 269 (44183)
06-25-2003 3:17 PM
Reply to: Message 54 by Buzsaw
06-25-2003 11:07 AM


Buz,
Geologists and physicists mentally locked into the illogical TOE tend to downplay simple logic and common sense in much of what they have become able to swallow, ideologically.
Unsupported bullpuckey. Which makes your conclusion.....
So I'm not all too convinced that one must know everything about to these things in order to debate some of the issues
....supported by nothing other than bullpuckey.
That geologists are locked into a ToE paradigm is a figment of your imagination, nothing more.
Your problem is that you are trying to gainsay millions of hours of science with nothing more than your opinion. Worse, when shown the data that contradicts you, you reject it on the basis of.....your opinion. If only your incredulity & opinion were empirical evidence, Buz. You have been given data that supports radiometric dating, which shows it beyond all reasonable doubt that your rejection of radiometric dating is unwarranted. Unless odds of millions to one plus against your position you think is reasonable, that is. Why do you still reject it? I've measured things with a ruler incorrectly, should we throw them away because errors do occur? Does that invalidate the method & all results? No, of course not. It is a standard creationist logical flaw to point to a small piece of data & claim it is indicative of all results.
You seem to have a very high regard for your own opinion, seemingly at the expense of knowledge gleaned by people who have dedicated their lives to the pursuit of increasing understanding of the world around us when you yourself refuse to be educated. I suppose you are left with nothing other than your opinion, if that is the case.
Take your assertion that the rock & the fossils encased within it are different ages. Did you even think about what you said? Both myself & others have pointed out that this requires mud to remain unlithified across the earths surface (all of it) for 3.5 billion years, when suddenly everything dies & the rock magically lithifies! But your ridiculous scenario doesn't end there. Certain organisms are only found in rocks of certain age ranges. How did they know where to die, or how deep to dig (for chrissakes), in order to be found globally, in many cases, only in those aged rocks. Furthermore, when taxa appear, they tend to do so basally, becoming more distinct & diverse as time goes by. How can this be true in your flood/globally unlithified mud scenario?
The flood certainly seems to be at odds with your own explanation.
Now, do you, or do you not, have any substantive response to this, & message 18, & message 35?
Lastly, what is illogical about the ToE? If it meets the standards of the scientific method, ie an inductively derived hypothesis that makes testable predictions that have been realised, then it is logical, surely? No strawmen please!
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.
[This message has been edited by mark24, 06-25-2003]
[This message has been edited by mark24, 06-25-2003]

This message is a reply to:
 Message 54 by Buzsaw, posted 06-25-2003 11:07 AM Buzsaw has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 67 by Buzsaw, posted 06-25-2003 4:53 PM mark24 has replied
 Message 68 by Buzsaw, posted 06-25-2003 5:11 PM mark24 has replied
 Message 74 by Buzsaw, posted 06-25-2003 7:41 PM mark24 has replied

  
mark24
Member (Idle past 5223 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 69 of 269 (44198)
06-25-2003 5:26 PM
Reply to: Message 68 by Buzsaw
06-25-2003 5:11 PM


Buz,
Again, in spite of these millions of hours of science, honest scientists who really face the enormity of time scores of millions to billions of years ago really is to the limited mind of man, admit there's a lot we just don't know for sure and it's not like a debate on the civil war or something where we can confidently say, "this is how it was.
On the contrary, due to the power of corroborative evidence, I can say say with a confidence of 71,639,296:1 that there are tektites 65 million years old at the K-T boundary, & that therefore the K-T boundary is 65 myo. Isn't that good enough for you? Why not?
The truth is, theres a lot you'd like to hand wave away, this is why you haven't dealt with message 18, non?
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 68 by Buzsaw, posted 06-25-2003 5:11 PM Buzsaw has not replied

  
mark24
Member (Idle past 5223 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 72 of 269 (44204)
06-25-2003 6:07 PM
Reply to: Message 67 by Buzsaw
06-25-2003 4:53 PM


Buz,
Would you like to comment on the Berkeley link and some arguments on the forum link which Karl makes about the K/T boundary, or are these simply too bullpucistical to qualify a response?
Sure, as soon as you tell me what contradicts my position.
History: Until recently, people simply knew that dinosaurs went extinct - their fossils were found throughout the Mesozoic era, but were not located in the rock layers (strata) of the Cenozoic era. So, we knew that dinosaurs went extinct some 64-66 million years ago, but that was all.
When your cite speaks of difficulties with resolution, They are talking 1my in either direction. This supports my argument, but, perhaps more seriously, your own cite contradicts your own argument.
I have already provided figures that tell you exactly how some K-T material was dated that provides results that are astonishingly concordant at around 65 my, I would suggest that your source is in broad agreement with me, & in disagreement with you. But again you miss the point. This thread is about radiometric dating reliability, & your cite barely touches it, except to say radiocarbon dating won't work on fossils that are > 50,000 years old, &....
Other methods of age determination are often less accurate or less useful in certain situations. So we don't know exactly when the dinosaurs went extinct, and matching events precisely to give a picture of what was happening at a specific moment in the Mesozoic is not easy.
It means by "less accurate" to mean a percentage point. I can live with that. It's the about same margin of error that the Vesuvius eruption was dated (within about 7 years, if my memory serves me). Read your cite again for comprehension.
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.
[This message has been edited by mark24, 06-25-2003]
[This message has been edited by mark24, 06-25-2003]
[This message has been edited by mark24, 06-25-2003]

This message is a reply to:
 Message 67 by Buzsaw, posted 06-25-2003 4:53 PM Buzsaw has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 75 by Buzsaw, posted 06-25-2003 7:57 PM mark24 has replied

  
mark24
Member (Idle past 5223 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 76 of 269 (44226)
06-25-2003 7:58 PM
Reply to: Message 74 by Buzsaw
06-25-2003 7:41 PM


Buz,
Fair enough, but you have, you must admit, concluded your sentences with "IMO" & no other supporting evidence more than once. I'm not the only one to have noticed, & my comment was based on that observation alone.
The reason i use links of others; some possibly more educated in science than some of you...
But do you understand the links you cite? The Berkeley link seems fairly sure the Dinosaurs died out ~65 mya, I'm left wondering why you cited it when it agrees with me & disagrees with you. See my last post for more.
If you are interested in science, start simple & build up. I also recommend finding a subject you enjoy & concentrating on that. I've bought books that have gone so high over my head they must have been in orbit, it's took a couple of simpler tomes to prime me for the first one. Don't bite off more than one mouthful at a time.
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 74 by Buzsaw, posted 06-25-2003 7:41 PM Buzsaw has not replied

  
mark24
Member (Idle past 5223 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 77 of 269 (44227)
06-25-2003 8:10 PM
Reply to: Message 75 by Buzsaw
06-25-2003 7:57 PM


Buz,
The above from a Berkley scientist which offers some, I say some, credence to certain statements I've made in my posts regarding the reliability of these dating methods.
But it doesn't, not one little tiny bit!
The point is that the resolution that can be achieved spans hundreds of millions of years to a million years (worst case). If you'd read post 18 you would see that the age range of the four dating methods spans 700,000 years. 0.7 my. If you were under the impression that radiometric dating could tell the date & time of the Alvarez event to 65,102,301 years, june 22nd, just after tea time, then you are constructing a straw man. Nobody said radiometric dating was that accurate, & post 18 supports the general accuracy of your Berkeley cite.
[Added by edit: Interestingly the Alvarez event has tentatively been placed in spring summertime, the source quoted june. There are lily pad type leaf fossils on the K-T boundary that show damage consistent with freezing. An effect caused by dust blocking out sunlight? Irrelevant to the discussion, but interesting nonetheless]
The point is, to within certain tolerances, radiometric dating gives excellent concordant results. Dalrymple & Berkeley agree. That the dinosaurs were already in decline, & the resolution of dated rocks cannot be accurate enough to truly & reliably (at this time) answer the question; did the dinosaurs die out slowly over hundreds of thousands of years, or was it in a blink? Has been known for yonks, it's nothing new, & does not in any way call into question that the dinosaurs died out ~65 mya.
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.
[This message has been edited by mark24, 06-25-2003]

This message is a reply to:
 Message 75 by Buzsaw, posted 06-25-2003 7:57 PM Buzsaw has not replied

  
mark24
Member (Idle past 5223 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 83 of 269 (44239)
06-25-2003 8:48 PM
Reply to: Message 81 by Buzsaw
06-25-2003 8:34 PM


Buz,
Mark, my whole purpose in the Berkley quote was not to focus on the dinosaurs, but to show that some scientific folks are willing to admit that the dating methods are not as down pat as some of you people seem to insist. his whole statement, after all, either directly or indirectly aludes to dating methods to a greater or lesser degree.
Did I not make this clear in my last post? The scientific folks you refer to agree with me, not you.
quote:
The point is that the resolution that can be achieved spans hundreds of millions of years to a million years (worst case). If you'd read post 18 you would see that the age range of the four dating methods spans 700,000 years. 0.7 my. If you were under the impression that radiometric dating could tell the date & time of the Alvarez event to 65,102,301 years, june 22nd, just after tea time, then you are constructing a straw man. Nobody said radiometric dating was that accurate, & post 18 supports the general accuracy of your Berkeley cite.
The point is, to within certain tolerances, radiometric dating gives excellent concordant results. Dalrymple & Berkeley agree. That the dinosaurs were already in decline, & the resolution of dated rocks cannot be accurate enough to truly & reliably (at this time) answer the question; did the dinosaurs die out slowly over hundreds of thousands of years, or was it in a blink? Has been known for yonks, it's nothing new, & does not in any way call into question that the dinosaurs died out ~65 mya.
No one is saying, or has ever said, that radiometric dating is 100% accurate. It does appear to be well over 98% accurate however. I'm sorry if you think this scores you points, but it doesn't. Four different methods got the K-T tektites within 0.7 my. That is an incredibly good result. By that I mean we can be fairly sure that the K-T boundary, & the tektites it contains are around 65 myo. I, nor anyone else is claiming that radiometric dating is any more "pat" than that.
I stand by the following statement. Radiometric dating produces results that are consistently above 98% accurate. I have shown it. Your own cite agrees. Period.
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 81 by Buzsaw, posted 06-25-2003 8:34 PM Buzsaw has not replied

  
mark24
Member (Idle past 5223 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 85 of 269 (44241)
06-25-2003 8:50 PM
Reply to: Message 81 by Buzsaw
06-25-2003 8:34 PM


Buz,
BTW, no more IMO's -- no, not even any IMHO's. I'm beginning to see that's not cool in this town. Let me know if the BTW's begin to be a problem.
No probs, I'm a big fan of TLA's.
Mark
ps That's Three Letter Acronym, btw
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 81 by Buzsaw, posted 06-25-2003 8:34 PM Buzsaw has not replied

  
mark24
Member (Idle past 5223 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 91 of 269 (44344)
06-26-2003 12:11 PM
Reply to: Message 88 by Buzsaw
06-26-2003 11:22 AM


Buz,
2. My beliefs that dating methods are flawed are shared by numerous educated creationist archeologists and scientists, some who were formerly evos.
Who cares what a bunch of people think are intellectually bankrupt enough to put scripture before evidence?
YOU HAVE NOT SHOWN THAT RADIOMETRIC DATING IS FLAWED. "CREATION SCIENTISTS" HAVEN'T SHOWN RADIOMETRIC DATING IS FLAWED. THAT IT IS STILL BEING USED, & DIFFERENT METHODS ARE PRODUCING INCREDIBLY CONCORDANT RESULTS ARE EVIDENCE ENOUGH OF THAT. IN RARE CASES RADIOMETRIC DATING CAN BE DATED AGAINST KNOWN EVENTS SUCH AS THE VESUVIUS ERUPTION, & GOT THE DATE RIGHT TO WITHIN 7 YEARS!!! HOW FLAWED IS RADIOMETRIC DATING WHEN IT CAN DO THAT?
Give us data that shows that radiometric dating is flawed to the extent that it should be rejected. Put up or shut up time.
Perhaps we could address this C14 problem,
Not before you address post 18. After that, sure. You are not going to be allowed to change the subject.
So to disqualify statements in scientific discussion on the basis of it not being scientific seems to defeat the whole idea of this board.
I disagree, it is the very reason threads exist on the evidential basis of the flood. To complain about the disqualification the "flood hypothesis" as being unscientific grounds is one of the biggest intellectual cop-outs ever. Listen to yourself: "There's no scientifically consistent evidence that points to a flood? So? That doesn't mean God didn't make it happen & then put everything back again..." , ie the "supernatural factor" you speak of. God writing the bible with its many inconsistencies to see how far people are prepared to go to defend their blind beliefs is as valid a hypothesis as an evidenceless flood hypothesis. The scenario is worse than that, though; there is directly contradicting data, not just no evidence.
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 88 by Buzsaw, posted 06-26-2003 11:22 AM Buzsaw has not replied

  
mark24
Member (Idle past 5223 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 105 of 269 (44602)
06-29-2003 9:20 AM
Reply to: Message 102 by Buzsaw
06-29-2003 1:38 AM


Re: I'll try to get us back to the original topic.
Buz,
To me, this problem is indicative of my statement to Rocky, that there's just too much time involved in these dating games for unknowns to exist, such as this problem until it was discovered.
And your data that suggests there is "too much time involved" is where? Is this just your opinion, again?
The same problem with carbon dating can be true with these other methods. How much carbon and nitrogen, etc was in the atmosphere in previous ages? Who knows about the other elements used in dating also.
You may be able to make this claim on a sample dated by one technique, but when two or more are producing similar results using different elements, this complaint is rendered moot. This is how we know the K-T boundary is 65 my old. No matter what technique is used, the same figure constantly appears. Either that, or exactly the same margin of error creeps in for all daughter isotopes. Not very likely. See post 18.
How much or how little of these elements existed and how did they relate to factors involved in the dating processes? No body was around millions or billions of years back to sample and test the data.
Again, the question you have been avoiding since message 18, why, against the vast odds of such a thing occurring by chance, do different methods produce congruent results when different elements are involved?
What other factors contaminated what elements at which age period? How can they assume factors present today to be close enough to being consistent at any given age of the past to know for sure.
We can be sure that the dates obtained are correct to a very, very high degree. See post 18. I'll lay odds of 70,000,000:1 on the strength of the K-T tektites alone that the K-T boundary alone is 65 million years old to within a 700k year margin of error. See post 18.
All of your complaints were dealt with 84 posts ago.
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 102 by Buzsaw, posted 06-29-2003 1:38 AM Buzsaw has not replied

  
mark24
Member (Idle past 5223 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 112 of 269 (44644)
06-30-2003 5:10 AM
Reply to: Message 109 by Buzsaw
06-29-2003 11:29 PM


Buz,
Either the Bible is wrong or there's some problems with dating methods of the fossils and petrified bones, etc. So as far as dating the rocks themselves I don't necessarily have a problem. The problem comes with the dates of the fossils found in those sedimentary rocks.
Sedimentary rocks are rocks made of particles that become lithified. That is that they become connected in a solid matrix, calcium carbonate for example. It therefore stands to reason that fossil organisms are of the same age as the sedimentary rock that they are preserved in. Can you think of a way to fossilise yourself within solid rock. The emphasis is *within*. These fossils do not lay atop or between strata, but are fully part of the lithified rock itself. How can a fossil possibly be 6,000 yo if you accept that the rock is 251 million years old? How could a lystrosaurus fossil be fully part of a 251 million year old rock when it itself is only 6,000 years old? Think about it. How would you go about embedding yourself in a rocks matrix in order to be fossilised, before lithification, or after?
Just so as I know. Are you prepared to accept that the bible is wrong on this?
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 109 by Buzsaw, posted 06-29-2003 11:29 PM Buzsaw has not replied

  
mark24
Member (Idle past 5223 days)
Posts: 3857
From: UK
Joined: 12-01-2001


Message 119 of 269 (44847)
07-02-2003 12:04 PM
Reply to: Message 116 by Buzsaw
07-02-2003 12:56 AM


Mark
But if the organic material is young and the inorganic material it is fossilized in is old, wouldn't the organic young permeate the old grains making up some of the "cement" which solidifies the inorganic.
No, it's s-o-l-i-d.
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 116 by Buzsaw, posted 07-02-2003 12:56 AM Buzsaw has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 121 by Buzsaw, posted 07-02-2003 10:36 PM mark24 has not replied

  
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