Originally posted by Morat
And the answer is rather obviously "Yes, yes they do". We had a geologist pop up and attest to it himself, and point to a large database of such.
Then you start nattering about them "throwing out dates". Well, let's grant you a big assumption. Let's say they do throw out dates. 1% of them are outliers. Now, roughly half would be older and half younger then the mean. Let's say (as is mostly the case) that 90% of those dates can be resolved as instrument or sample problems (like excess argon).
You are now left with 0.1% of all radiometric dates don't agree to a given age.
That's a better margin of error than most of the parts in my car, Nick. If 99.9% of radiometric dates agree to a given age, why on earth would you take the 0.1% over the 99.9%?
(Actually, it's worse. Outliers go both ways. It'd be roughly 0.05%, and most of those would be within a few standard deviations. To get "Young Earth" type dates would place it way out there....a much tinier percentage).