stephen583
Well-Known Member
- Jan 12, 2016
- 2,202
- 913
- 68
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Christian
- Marital Status
- Single
I think people should question the scientific method of carbon dating. Did you know there was a mythbuster episode that proved carbon dating to be false/ as in its not accurate. They put a piece of sweaty cloth in an oven at low heat for 3 days, when they carbon dated the piece it showed up as being over 600 years old.
I know how to cross contaminate a DNA sample and produce an inaccurate report as well . Does that prove DNA evidence is pseudoscience ?! Of course not. All it proves is there is a way of screwing up the results of a scientific procedure. Same thing Mythbusters did with carbon dating. Naturally if you heat up anything, you're going to alter its' carbon content a bit.
What Mythbusters was unable to demonstrate, was the ability to significantly change the carbon content of cloth by heating it. Six hundred years is a blink of the eye in geologic terms. Could Mythbusters produce a piece of heated cloth that dates to two or three million years B.C. ?! I seriously doubt it. If they could have, they would have.
Carbon dating is only one of the indicators of the age of an object. That result has to be verified by other means. Archeologists also use geologic strata identification as a means of verifying the accuracy of a carbon dating estimate.
If you find something carbon dated at 1,000 years B.C. in a sediment dating from one million years B.C. you obviously have a serious problem with the carbon dating result. However, if the carbon dating and the age of the sediment match, you have a BINGO.
Archeologists also take other samples from the same known strata and carbon date those as well, using them as a control, to verify the accuracy of an estimate on an object or artifact. In order for a method to be reliable, you must be able to verify and reproduce it.
I guess what I'm saying is, given the choice between trusting scientists and archeologists, or a television entertainment program like Mythbusters, I'm going to go with the former as an authority on what is real and what is fake.
Oh yeah. From personal experience as an outdoorsman, I guarantee you there is no way two people who haven't had a hot soapy bath in several weeks would sleep next to each other, sit together, or even stand next to each other, the way they do on the television program "Survivor". It's fake. Don't believe everything you see on T.V. Ben. Lol.
Last edited:
Upvote
0