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Updating The Theory of the Earth

Loudmouth

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If you have a zeal for truth, why do you continue to push your ideas even when they have been proven wrong?

4. The purpose of carbon dating a dinosaur fossil is to find evidence for an hypothesis which is contrary to the standard mainstream position.

Doing so is extremely dishonest. Carbon dating could not return an age of 65 million years old, even if the sample were 65 million years old. They have rigged their test from the get go. When your method of measurement maxes out at just 1% of the actual age of the fossil, YOU SHOULDN'T BE USING THAT METHOD. What they should be using is a method that is capable of measuring ages into the millions of years.


Do you think you can be wrong or ignorant?
 
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SkyWriting

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That is certainly one explanation. They can cold flow, warm flow, or hot flow.
Each would have it's own time frame from original lay-down to current
situation. How do I test each possibility, and how do I determine the
conditions of the entire process from start to finish?
 
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Loudmouth

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I have given what I understand to be the proposed young earth explanation for the apparent inconsistency earlier in this thread. Simplified, it is that in the past, the C14/C12 ratio was much lower, giving inflated ages from carbon dating.

Then why doesn't it show up as a major deviation in the data?



The dendro age on the x-axis is the age as measured by counting tree rings. The y-axis is the carbon age assuming a constant 14C concentration. As you can see, the data doesn't veer far from the 1:1 line demonstrating very little change in the carbon ratios.
 
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Loudmouth

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I couldn't find the exact graph I was looking for, but aren't there dendro records where the spike of 14C from atmospheric atomic bomb testing shows up as clear as a bell?
 
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Paul of Eugene OR

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Well, I'm not a geologist, I don't have answers at that level of detail. Presumably the way to attack the problem would be to develop theory and formula for rock deformation at various pressures and temperatures, then plug in reasonable amounts based on the known geological facts, and see what the formulas predict as to deformation versus time, heat, and pressure. Then see if rock beds showing actual rock folds had a history consistent with the necessary deformation heat and pressure to result in such folds.
 
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SkyWriting

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And when there is only one possible explanation left, however unlikely,
that must be the correct one. I must wonder how many people reach
that point before publishing?
 
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Loudmouth

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Then you should also be aware that the tree ring data contradicts what you are saying. If there was a major change in the carbon isotope ratios in the past then it would show up in the tree ring data. It isn't there. So why do you keep pushing this idea of huge changes in carbon isotope ratios? Are you more interested in reaching the conclusion that you want instead of the truth?


The facts are that the calibration curve corrects for some relatively small (2 to 3%) known variations. What I was suggesting was an unknown, much greater variation.

If there was a huge variation it would have shown up in the tree ring data.

You can argue that such a variation doesn't exist, but you cannot logically argue that the calibration curve corrects for it.

Why can't we argue that the calibration curve corrects for small fluctuations in historic concentrations of 14C? After all, THAT'S THE ENTIRE PURPOSE OF THE CALIBRATION CURVE!!!!
 
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Paul of Eugene OR

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And when there is only one possible explanation left, however unlikely,
that must be the correct one. I must wonder how many people reach
that point before publishing?

It depends on what you mean there by "unlikely". Unlikely events happen all the time. And I see nothing wrong with the logic of "when there is only one possible explanation left, however unlikely, that must be the correct one". Do you see something wrong with it?
 
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RickG

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I couldn't find the exact graph I was looking for, but aren't there dendro records where the spike of 14C from atmospheric atomic bomb testing shows up as clear as a bell?
Yes, it is note worthy for everyone to understand that carbon dating works from a baseline of 1950, in part because of that spike.
 
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Loudmouth

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Here is a graph from the paper I was thinking of (Irish dendro records):



http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2004GeCoA..68.2509M

This is the type of signal we would expect to see in the dendro record if there was a sudden change in 14C 3,000 years ago, but it isn't there.
 
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