If you don't know then why does your argument rely upon it being true?Because I have the honesty to admit I don't know. So called science has the unmitigated gall to make stuff up.
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If you don't know then why does your argument rely upon it being true?Because I have the honesty to admit I don't know. So called science has the unmitigated gall to make stuff up.
How many of these papers did you read, I mean in the time it took you to reply I would have struggled to read one.
Again just hand waving, it does not impress anyone, except perhaps indoctrinated creationists.
Read the papers, not just the Abstracts
The general observation of decreasing δ18O and δ2H values in rainfall as elevation increases has been used in both empirical and theoretical approaches to estimate paleoelevation. These studies rely on the preservation of ancient surface water compositions in authigenic minerals to reconstruct the elevation at the time the minerals were forming. In this review we provide a theory behind the application of stable isotope-based approaches to paleoaltimetry.(SOURCE)
If you propose the papers prove that there was ice in the Carboniferous, it is up to you to concisely show how. Personally, I don't know, maybe there was some poles even in that different past, before the breakup of continents. But you appear incapable of making a clean clear case. How impressive is that?? It almost sounds like 'I don't really know what I am talking about, and can't explain it, just read these big papers somewhere, they seem to be official'How many of these papers did you read, I mean in the time it took you to reply I would have struggled to read one.
Again just hand waving, it does not impress anyone, except perhaps indoctrinated creationists.
Read the papers, not just the Abstracts
Um, no it's not. The PAPERS provide evidence for it. If you think their conclusions are wrong it's YOUR job to provide evidence against, point out problems or flaws in their methodology or data, et ceteraIf you propose the papers prove that there was ice in the Carboniferous, it is up to you to concisely show how.
But further he certainly has a right to ask what connection 13-C ratios have to ice and other materials, but again that is a very detailed bit of information that I don't even recall and I had a semester of stable isotope geochemistry (it was about 20 years ago or so). But the point being that the sheer volume of intensely detailed information that is incumbent on these articles is something that should give people like Dad pause to realize:
They think they know, you believe them. They do not know about the past, only the present, to any impressive degree.People know a LOT about this stuff that Dad can't even hope to understand from a brief read-through of a few posted articles.
But you can't say why. So what, cheerleading in now all you can do in a debate??Gimme a break. This is some intense stuff. Some really complex material. When you get down to the level of stable isotopic signatures there's a lot of really neat and wholly understood and supported modern-day science that explains why rocks carry the stable isotopes that they do.
from that..As an example, Dad, you can actually find evidence for RAINSHADOWS in rocks by looking at the stable oxygen isotopes that are preserved in the rocks (carbonates and some clays). Here's an article about this.
Dad will, of course, revert to the "unseen past" model and tell us we know nothing about how isotopes fractionated "back then", but it's all beside the point. This is the best data we have. Unless dad can actively show why this data is so doubtful that it cannot yield useful information it is the best we have.
The science behind the fractionation, the math behind it, is not simple straightforward GED stuff. Many people spend their careers working out these fractionations.
If you were disciplined enough you'd show us the science, that needed taking on!If Dad was disciplined enough he'd take on the science and not just the "hedge words".
It is up to anyone offering those conclusions to say what they are, and how they got there!!! Otherwise, you offer nothing.Um, no it's not. The PAPERS provide evidence for it. If you think their conclusions are wrong it's YOUR job to provide evidence against, point out problems or flaws in their methodology or data, et cetera
But they already are offering something; the papers!It is up to anyone offering those conclusions to say what they are, and how they got there!!! Otherwise, you offer nothing.
Talk about that. Tell us why it could not have been anything but ice. (as opposed to pre flood flooding, or etc)The Late Carboniferous Glaciation
After the Silurian flooding event in Arabia and the subsequent deposition of a sequence dominated by fluvial and marine sandstones,
So, tell us about this. How do we know that this uplift, for example was not part of the rapid continental move?? There is enough there to chew on for you. No need to look at the rest of your big claims yet, untill you do.the plate was affected by a series of uplift events culminating in the Carboniferous-aged Hercynian event.
Hey, so far all I saw linked was a rattling bunch of story telling, not supporting itself on the way at all. That is for believers, not honest folk. Roll up the sleeves, and get dirty, if you want to defend that tale. I'll slug it out every step of the way, and you can be sure, 'it will not pass!'You're saying that these papers rely upon assumptions, but that doesn't make them wrong. If you think they are, prove those assumptions wrong. If you can't, or if you can't even propose a method by which these assumptions could be tested and shown wrong, you have no case.
from that..
Well, now, why was the water from a meteor? It forgot to say??
What about the isotopes gives the age in this case, precisely?
What are the assumptions of how the mountains got there?
If you were disciplined enough you'd show us the science, that needed taking on!
from that..
" Topographic development of the southern Washington Cascade Range and its influence on regional climate on the leeward side of the range for the past 15.6 m.y. are evaluated, using oxygen isotope ratios (18O) of ancient meteoric water recorded in authigenic smectites."![]()
Well, now, why was the water from a meteor? It forgot to say??
(from HERE)WordNet said:meteoric (of or pertaining to atmospheric phenomena, especially weather and weather conditions) "meteorological factors"; "meteorological chart"; "meteoric (or meteorological) phenomena"
You do realize that all water was said to have come from meteors at one time??? That means rainwater as well.You're joking right now, aren't you? You do know what "meteoritic water" is don't you?
That's what scientists call RAINWATER. Sheesh. You don't even understand the common language of the field yet you want to critique it????
Please. I'm laughing too hard right now.
The claims as a whole are precisely of that quality and fragrance.(Mind you, I don't mind that you don't know what specific scientific terms are, but you are just so nasty about it, what with comparing this field to feces as you did, and then you put your foot so firmly in your mouth on this one that it reminds me of the adage that "pride cometh before a fall". It fits so well!)
Hey, Einstein, we're talking stable isotopes here. This has nothing to do with age dating.
Again, you're making me laugh too hard.
Your ignorance is amazing to behold. No offense, I wouldn't expect you to know this stuff, but your snarky nasty comments in criticism of the science make your ignorance upon which they are based kind of sad but kind of funny.
Learn the following, stop claiming that rainwater shows mountains are millions of years old is you can't explain how.Learn the following then come back to the table:
Meteoritic water
Stable Isotope Geochemistry
Well, that is funny to have thought they referred to meteors bring the water. I can have a good laugh at that as well.
To anyone that makes false claims, and can't support them.Are you saying that to a geologist?![]()
Well, that is funny to have thought they referred to meteors bring the water. I can have a good laugh at that as well.
In this case, it is rainwater, so I await someone to show us how that is a good proof for the claims.
Quality is more important than volume. One can take a scoop of doo doo, or shovel a truck load, but it is still what it is.
You do realize that all water was said to have come from meteors at one time??? That means rainwater as well.
dad said:" Topographic development of the southern Washington Cascade Range and its influence on regional climate on the leeward side of the range for the past 15.6 m.y. are evaluated, using oxygen isotope ratios (18O) of ancient meteoric water recorded in authigenic smectites."![]()
The claims as a whole are precisely of that quality and fragrance.
Great, Sherlock, so, what about stable isotopes means the mountains are the many millions of years old
Learn the following, stop claiming that rainwater shows mountains are millions of years old is you can't explain how.