Some funny thing can happen to fossils, petrified wood,amber,silicified whale bones and they all require special conditions
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Originally posted by sulphur
Some funny thing can happen to fossils, petrified wood,amber,silicified whale bones and they all require special conditions
Originally posted by JohnR7
All I know about it is that I have seen wood that has petrified within 100 years. As a carpenter, I have worked on houses where the wood has gotten so hard that it was impossable to drive a nail into it. As hard as a stone.
Now I do not know how long science says it takes for wood to get petrified, but I know it does not take that long. Esp, the post WW2 homes when they used green wood without curing it, or allowing it to dry out. Before they started to kilm dry the wood. That sap will turn that wood very hard in no time at all, maybe 25 to 50 years.
Originally posted by LightBearer
Commenting on the continuing competition among evolutionists as to who has found the oldest/best humanlike fossil, an editorial in The New York Times (1983) observed that paleoanthropology is a "science long on dramatic assertions and short on sure knowledge. Paleoanthropology draws upon the rigorous disciplines of anatomy and geology but includes so much room for conjecture that theories of how man came to be tend to tell more about their author than their subject."
The Times editorial ...
... noted the example of "English anatomists [who] uncritically accepted the Piltdown fossils that came to light around 1910"-later proved to be a hoax.
To show that little has changed among today's evolutionists, the book Missing Links is cited: "[Modern paleoanthropologists] are no less likely to cling to erroneous data that supports their preconceptions than were earlier investigators."
Why this lack of scientific objectivity? The Times suggests: ...
..."One reason may be that some theories attract more material support than others [or, "better" fossils get better funding]. . . . The finder of a new skull often seems to redraw the family tree of man, with his discovery on the center line that leads to man and everyone else's skulls on side lines leading nowhere."
In any event, said the editorial, "Most of the [fossil] evidence would fit on a billiard table," making anyone's interpretation subject to sudden change.
From the use of Piltdown, I have to assume that it is some committed creationist rather than a scientist, and I have to say, 'So what?'
"Hijacking Fossils"
Under that title, the French daily Le Monde reported the case of a paleontologist in India who "for 20 years . . . apparently deceived his colleagues concerning the origin of fossils that he submitted to them for their appraisal."
Originally posted by Jerry Smith
Since the person who posted it is also the sort who will copy someone else's writings and try to pass them off as their own, I find any such story suspect, particularly when such care has been taken to leave out any information that might help someone check its accuracy.
3. Cite your sources when copying and pasting information into your post. We aim for original thinking in this forum, and as such, we detest plagarism of any kind. We have several methods to determine if you have copied and pasted information. Abusers of this will be accused of violating the board's spam rule.
Originally posted by JohnR7
That is not plagiarism. Have you ever heard of the fair use laws?
By your definition of plagiarism the quote function on this forum would be plagiarism.
Originally posted by JohnR7
That is not plagiarism. Have you ever heard of the fair use laws?