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Where do the flood strata start and end?

MrsLurking

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Please don't be defensive. I've spent some time on other internet forums that deal with the controversies of politics or religion, and alternative accounts, or "alts", are pretty common. Identifying them is a kind of sport. So I'm sure you understand that a double post will invite that kind of scrutiny.

Your father, verysincere, has described himself as a researcher who is investigating the YEC movement, no? I guess that makes a Christian such as me a kind of lab mouse, right? And forum alts can be useful tools in sociological research, yes?

But if you say you're not using alts, then you're not. That's your business. Besides, your unintended double post has added some spice to the day! Thanks for that. :)

My apologies for not using an emoticon on my "conspiracy theory" statement. I meant it as a joke, in part referring to Juvenissum who thinks there is something sinister afoot and one other forum participant.

I suppose you could look at it as "lab mouse" but we look at it as getting typical YEC perspectives in their own words---and therefore more accurately described. We are NOT using the data as statistical representations of the movement in terms of what most YECs think or anything like that. It is purely anecdotal information, and it MAY get used to help advise a questionnaire which WILL be more systematic in surveying YEC views. We are watching for our terms are used and even our YECs in different countries may differ or share similarities. It helps to "mingle" with the data in order to simply get familiar with it to get general ideas where to head. And by the way, both VerySincere and MrsLurking have YEC backgrounds, although MrsLurking was not as involved as a speaker/debater and didn't have the many inside-the-movement experiences and contacts as VerySincere. (And he is far better known internationally than I will ever be.)

And yes, I think many of these questions on the various threads are quite fun!
 
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MrsLurking

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re: talkorigins.org

I can tell you why I think some of it is not...Right off the bat from physics we know that the amount of C-14 increases during times of greater Cosmic Ray bombardment (which I am sure happened multiple times in earth history). Thus the predictable “assumed” mother load is deceptive. So in Münnich KO, Östlund HG, de Vries H (1958). "Carbon-14 Activity during the past 5,000 Years". Nature 182 (4647): 1432–3. Bibcode 1958Natur.182.1432M. doi:10.1038/1821432a0 (is that specific enough), de Vries showed this to us...C-14 in the atmosphere thus in organisms and trees etc., varies according to locality and time, so to try and compensate for this they employ calibration curves which lead to what I have called here the "line of best guess". Best guess does not equal IS.


Talk Origins opinions on dating assume that the number of atoms of the daughter isotope originally in the rock or mineral when it crystallized can be known (which it cannot). In other words, it is assumed that we can know the initial conditions when the rock or mineral formed (which we do not).

They assume a constant rate of decay (which we know actually can and does fluctuate under differing conditions) and as a result they further assume that the number of atoms of the parent and daughter isotopes have not been altered since the rock or mineral crystallized. In other words, it is assumed that the rock or mineral remained closed to loss or gain assumptions based on the unknown state of the original parent and/or daughter isotopes.

So Talk Origins works from an assumption that the rate of decay of the parent isotope is known accurately (and they know it is not). Very deceptive...


There were no humans to observe or determine the original numbers of atoms of the daughter isotopes, or to determine that the rocks or minerals have remained closed to loss or gain of parent and/or daughter isotopes, and to determine if the rate of decay of the parent isotope has remained constant. These assumptions are not provable so why present them as if they are established fact.


Others have shredded the popular myths you have reiterated here (such as your thinking that original numbers of daughter isotopes is a problem.) In fact, it is such a common and basic error of most young earth creationist websites, it immediately alerted me to the fact that you have probably gotten your misinformation from such sources. We run into that one A LOT. (Even the RATE Project, which should have known better, keeps reinforcing such errors.)

Another red flag was your citing an article about mollusks and Carbon-14 and the simple fact that nobody who understands using C-14 dating for such organisms---and the article explains why! And that misuse of such articles is a common "give-away" trait of people who are using YEC sources to misunderstand the topic.

There's nothing wrong with being new to a topic. You are no more wrong than a great many others and we actually sympathize with the plight of those who try to separate the real science from all the "noise" coming from the propaganda sites ----which in turn get re-posted throughout the internet.

Anyway, others have done a great job of dissecting the errors so I won't repeat them here. But good to meet you.
 
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MrsLurking

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I don't care who you are. I only read what you said and see how you respond. If I ignored one of you, I will probably ignore the other two of you sooner or later.

You clearly DO care because you posted on the topic and thought it was something sinister at work. But as to promising to ignore valid scientific information, you are already doing that. So I certainly expect that you will continue.
 
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pshun2404

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re: talkorigins.org




Others have shredded the popular myths you have reiterated here (such as your thinking that original numbers of daughter isotopes is a problem.) In fact, it is such a common and basic error of most young earth creationist websites, it immediately alerted me to the fact that you have probably gotten your misinformation from such sources. We run into that one A LOT. (Even the RATE Project, which should have known better, keeps reinforcing such errors.)

There's nothing wrong with being new to a topic. You are no more wrong than a great many others and we actually sympathize with the plight of those who try to separate the real science from all the "noise" coming from the propaganda sites ----which in turn get re-posted throughout the internet.

Anyway, others have done a great job of dissecting the errors so I won't repeat them here. But good to meet you.

Who is the "we"? You, yourself, and you? Which one are you today? And sorry I did not get my info from a Creation Science website. I already told you Creation "science" is impossible for obvious reasons. It's like describing the outside of a box the describer has never been out of. For the same reason science can never disprove it either, but that aside, you still cannot know the original amount of C-14 in most objects of great antiquity so why tell outright lies and think it convinces me? At best you can guess assuming the rate of decay is reliably constant which regardless of what you say here is ASSUMED. It can be in some guesses a reasonable assumption but an assumption nonetheless maam...and assumption nonetheless...

Paul
 
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pshun2404

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You clearly DO care because you posted on the topic and thought it was something sinister at work. But as to promising to ignore valid scientific information, you are already doing that. So I certainly expect that you will continue.

Dear Ms or Mr...I reasoned with sound logic not the repetition of some mill whether theist or anti-theist...
 
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pshun2404

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Second - you seem to have garbled his story anyway. He described how he used to be a YEC, is not now, and has been a professor both when he was YEC and up through now.

No! As I read it the person said "in all there years as a young earth creationist university professor"..and you are correct, I apologize, it was VS...but I see no reason to deduce from this that this person stopped being one, especially after they claimed after years they finally teach in a Christian college...

Why should this person be vague when in so many posts they could have clarified the issue...again VS is obviously NOT a YEC so on what basis or authority or degree he may hold would he be knowledgeable on the subject to teach it?!?

I apologize to you Papias but you do not need to excuse him
 
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46AND2

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Interesting! I also have been inspired based on your post to go and learn more about this subject of Isochrons (as admittedly I am lacking here...for sure). Thanks

Paul

It is fascinating. I really enjoy learning about the different dating methods. I'm planning to start school in the fall and study geology, with a focus on geochronology. I'd like to work in one of the labs.

At any rate, here is a pretty good link talking about isochrons, in response to some creationist complaints (responses to objections of isochrons starts about halfway down the page, but I recommend reading the whole thing. It's a good article by Dalrymple):

How Old is the Earth: Radiometric Dating

And this is a page here on the forums with a pretty good discussion on the topic:

http://www.christianforums.com/t15824/

talkorigins has a pretty good explanation about how the method works, as well.
 
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46AND2

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Cool, thanks, but I will keep in mind that Dalrymple's conclusions have been questioned by other (non-creationist) scientists. But I am going to read the first link tonight...

Paul

One would be hard pressed to find a topic in science in which everyone agrees. Indeed, part of the scientific method is to always question conclusions of their predecessors, no matter how firm their theories are established.

Dalrymple is one of the premier geochronologists on the planet, and if I remember correctly, he was the one who actually invented the K/Ar method. His 1991 book Age of the Earth was regarded for a long time, perhaps even still, as the best semi-technical/layman book on the topic. Faure is another good author to check out if you are interested.

I noted that the objection to Dalrymple's conclusions which you posted was actually written prior to the Dalrymple piece. I know that Dalrymple has responded to many of his critics (mostly creationists, of course) but I'll have to see if he specifically addressed the points you brought up in your post. Not sure when I will have time to do so, however. I'll need to look at the context of the quotes you posted, to get a better grasp on the argument.
 
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46AND2

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Yes this works fine up to and a little beyond such a date but comparisons between Radio-Carbon years and known historical years show a variance in conclusion such that at 21,000 RC years we differ by 3,000 years with other historical analyses. And by 50,000 RC years other methods demonstrate there to only have been 36,000 years (and the farther one goes back in time the broader the variance becomes).

Yes, they are still working on the calibration for the older ages, mostly through lake varves and coral bands. The last I read, they have a fairly robust calibration to about 37,000 years ago. At which point there appears to have been some variations in the atmosphere, for which they are attempting to determine a cause. Although the current calibration charts do go back past 50k years, the last 15k years or so are less certain, pending more research.

As for how far off the RC dates are from the calibrated dates, it doesn't really matter. That is what the calibration is for. To adjust for that variance. Essentially, all it tells us is how different the atmospheric content of C14:C12 was back then relative to what the content is now (more precisely, what it was in 1950).

I used to calibrate electronic equipment in the military. Say I got a multimeter in the shop which read 130 volts when I only applied 100 volts to it from the voltage standard. That's a significant difference, and it needs to be calibrated. So, while that 100 volts is being applied, I tweaked a potentiometer until the multimeter read 100 volts. After that, any time you measured 100 volts using the multimeter, you knew that it really was 100 volts. It doesn't matter that the meter read 130 volts prior to the calibration.

And that's what happens with carbon dating. MOST carbon dates given are the corrected value. That is the default position. If the uncalibrated date is used, it will be noted, usually by the letters "BP" afterward, which stand for Before Present. When this happens, it is understood that the data is essentially a ballpark figure.



Now I realize most of this opinion is coming out of my head and old notes I have collected over the years and you are correct in that I know little about the technicalities of Isochron dating (my field of knowledge is biology) but I have been told by Professor Daniel Schrag of Harvard University in a discussion forum a few years back that there are other reliable, intelligent, published scientists who question the reliability in some cases and that in quality scientific presentation their views should be (and among real scientists is) respected even if disagreed with ( IMO contrary data or evidence of possible error in findings or in what results were expected, should not be discarded but reported along with the concluding scientists own position as well as their reasons for why they disagree with the possibly dissenting information…which is the case with most scientists and what they publish). The sad thing for me is that in forums like these dissenters are not respected or their views really looked at for what they suggest.

Well, obviously you understand that the conversation you had with Mr. Schrag is anecdotal. And I obviously can't view the context of said discussion.

That said, there are examples where the data has been questioned, no doubt. And that's great. It's how we learn more about the process. But the fact that there are issues with "some cases" does not indicate a fatal flaw for the process itself. Nature throws us curveballs sometimes, and we have to find out why. And as you said, reputable scientists should figure out why their data doesn't add up. This happens all the time. In fact, it is unlikely that the paper would get published WITHOUT hypotheses which may explain the data through further study.

The problem with dissenting opinions on message boards is that they are, by and large, made by individuals who are hopelessly ignorant of the process, and incapable of offering a reasonable hypothesis, or even in many cases to understand whether it is a problem or not. Furthermore, virtually all of these dissenting opinions are not new issues that they have come up with on their own. They have been passed around creationist circles for decades, and they have received them 2nd, 3rd, 4th, etc. hand. And the worst part is that the first hand origin of these dissenting opinions are based on misunderstanding (or outright ignoring) of the resolutions given in the scientific papers to begin with. In other words, they are issues that science has dealt with extensively, often 40+ years ago.

Many laymen posting on message boards simply cannot comprehend how complicated geophysics and geochemistry is. They think they can pick out a little flaw that refutes the whole process, while totally ignorant of the big picture and the fact that science has already discussed the issue and resolved it or determined it irrelevant, decades ago.

Also I once read (and noted) a discussion forum where one researcher named Bale (sorry I no longer have a specific reference, but read his assessment and then comment) who says that in isochron dating, ages are obtained from the slope of a line based on isotope ratios measured for different minerals of the same age. He said, “The theory is that, although the different minerals have different initial amounts of the radioactive parent, the same percentage of the parent will decay in each case, with the result that the measured isotope ratios will fall on a line but that there are different isochron systems. “


G. Brent Dalrymple, Ph. D., "Radiometric Dating, Geologic Time, and the age of the Earth: A Reply to 'Scientific' Creationism," February, 1982, published by the U.S Geological Survey, discusses the Rb-Sr isochron, which plots the ratio Sr(87)/Sr(86) as a function of the ratio Rb(87)/Sr(86) ratio:


"When a rock is first formed, say from a magma, the Sr(87)/Sr(86) ratios in all of the minerals will be the same, regardless of the rubidium or strontium contents of the minerals, so all of the samples will plot on a horizontal line." (page 32)


However, Brooks, James, and Hart (C. Brooks, D.E. James, and S.R. Hart, "Ancient Lithosphere: Its Role in Young Continental Volcanism," Science, Vol. 193, September 17, 1976, pages 1086-1094, have found that this statement is not always true. They studied 30 examples given in the peer reviewed literature, correcting where necessary…


So according to isochron theory, the resulting diagrams, called pseudo-isochrons, should always be horizontal lines. However, the authors report:


"Correlation theory and regression analysis indicate that most of these psuedoisochrons have slopes significantly different from zero at confidence levels up to 95 percent (in some cases up to 99.9 percent) and that they define excess "ages" ranging from 70 million years to more than 3000 million years." (see page 1087)

Did you read the article by Brooks, James, and Hart? Did you notice that they did exactly what you would expect a good scientist to do, and offer interpretations of the "deviant" data?

Your quote is dangerously close to a quotemine. This paper is not a refutation of Dalrymple's work. And it is not, in any way, laying doubt upon the method. Indeed, they say in the paper:

We believe that the pseudoisochrons contain significant age information and are in reality mantle isochrons. It is the purpose of this article to elucidate this precept, and show that Sr isotopic study of young mafic volcanics provides windows through which the chronologic evolution of subcontinental mantle can be viewed, and regional variations mapped.

There are a couple of key points to be aware of here: 1. They are able to determine when the initial Sr87/Sr86 ratios deviate from horizontal. 2. It is not suggested that these results are the norm 3. The pseudoisochrons are useful information, in and of themselves

So, basically I fail to see why it is a problem that pseudoisochrons sometimes occur, when we have the ability to detect them when they exist. Furthermore, they are irrelevant on isochrons in which the pseudoisochron test is negative (i.e., when the initial ratios form a horizontal line), which happens the majority of the time.

So Bale asked we please note that “the upper limit of error magnitude would give a newly formed rock an "age" 75% of the believed age of the earth.” The paper states that the cause of the error (which is really just data which disagrees with their expected results and is not “contamination” at all which in SOME cases is an excuse used to throw out or disregard the contrary findings) “could be contamination” (could be does not equal IS), but also states a number of reasons for believing it is not, putting forth the idea that the results represent the age of the underlying mantle that was the source of the magma.

Great. As I stated in my first reply, they are talking about mixing. Please see Dalrymple's reply to the mixing complaint.

I think you have a bit of a misconception about why scientists have "expected results." It is because situations like these are the exception to the rule, not because of any preconceived bias.

They want to determine why they get an unexpected result. In this case, they considered contamination, but ruled it out for a variety of reasons, in favor of a better alternative. From that point forward, more tests can be done on their hypothesis. This is a 40 year old paper. Have you researched papers which cited this one to find out if anyone contributed more insight to their mantle source hypothesis? Radiometric dating has come a LONG way in the last 40 years.

The conclusion of the authors is:


"One serious consequence of the mantle isochron model is that crystallization ages determined on basic igneous rocks by the Rb-Sr whole rock technique can be greater than the true age by many hundreds of millions of years. This problem of inherited age is more serious for younger rocks , and there are well-documented instances of conflicts between stratigraphic age and Rb-Sr age in the literature." (see page 1093).

and the quote goes on to say:

Effective use of the mantle isochron concept requires knowledge of actual crystalIization ages (so that the measured isochron can be divided into its pre-and postcrystallization components) and determination of isochron parameters on rocks that have been subjected to minimal postmelting processes (fractional crystallization, wall rock contamination, and so forth). The concept of Rb-Sr mantle isochrons as we have presented it provides a new tool for understanding the petrogenesis of mantle-derived igneous
rocks and for mapping the evolution of the various segments of the earth's
mantle

So...the study does not:

This study shows the apparent results gave too ancient of a date for SOME SP<samples (thus demonstrating probable inadequacies within this very excellent method). However, knowing these discrepancies, the authors of the study still contended that the dates represented real dates for the earth's mantle (thus, the probable possibility was excluded from the conclusion).

But rather:

The concept of Rb-Sr mantle isochrons as we have presented it provides a new tool for understanding the petrogenesis of mantle-derived igneous rocks and for mapping the evolution of the various segments of the earth's mantle

Moving on...


See also &#8220;Calculation of 230 TH/U Isochrons, Ages, and Errors&#8221; shared by , K, R, Ludwig (Geological Survey, Mail Stop 963, Denver, CO 80225-0046, USA),and D. M. Titterington (University of Glasgow, Department of Statistics, Glasgow G12 8QW, United Kingdom) where it is pointed out that &#8220;when analytical errors are responsible for the scatter of points on a 230Th-234U-238U isochron diagram&#8221;, the isochron should be fitted by a technique that &#8220;weights the points according to their analytical errors and error correlations, and either takes into account the presence of some of the same data in two coupled XY isochrons or (equivalently not specifically) uses a single, three-dimensional XYZ isochron.&#8221; Which they know and honestly admit is &#8220;a method based on maximum-likelihood estimation&#8221; (thus not on established indisputable fact). Therefore other conclusions are possible, even probable, and may in fact be the case. (all parentheses mine)

Sorry, but I'm not going to spend more time on another paper which likely doesn't say what you claim it does.


And I also do not believe in a 6,000 year old earth, but I want you to know your comments are noted, I appreciate them, and I will explore these comments more fully.

Interesting. Do you have an opinion on the age of the earth?



Here I do have an issue which would be that because something does not fit the model or the expected results this does not necessarily imply contamination unless can show how and when and by what means something was contaminated&#8230;at least define what the contamination actually was and how it occurred (and theoretical speculation on this would be fine so long as it was admitted and understood to be theoretical speculation). And I did not say the system remains closed.

Scientists DO show how it was contaminated. If they don't, the papers wouldn't get published.

Just because message board posters do not explain the contamination, does not mean the scientists don't.

If there is data that is abnormal, they document their conclusions, and where necessary, indicate whether further testing needs to be performed. This is completely standard. The only exception is when the cause of the aberrant data has ALREADY been identified in previous studies.
 
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pshun2404

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Listen guys, I agree with much of these last two posts and yes, I pray we never stop questioning or being allowed to question...and who knows how long a yom (day) is (Biblically) since Moses himself uses the word to mean time, an extended period, and epoch, and even as for ever...so I have no problem with the earth being millions or billions of years old but as for reporting the contamination I think if you look closely you will find they give explanations for it and times when it is indicated but its not an etched in stone (pun intended) established fact these are the accurate truth but derived though mathematical formulas which work as far as agreeing with what they expected so for me this is still suspect.

I did read half of Dalrymple's article and then got sideswiped and will read the rest but I did have some issues with one section and maybe I misunderstood what he was trying to say so here goes...

Dalrymple says &#8220;This correction is easily made by measuring the amount of 36Ar present and, using the known isotopic composition of atmospheric argon (40Ar/ 36Ar = 295.5), subtracting the appropriate amount of 40Ar due to atmospheric contamination.&#8221;

I believe he assumes this solves the problem and believes the results, but he cannot actually determine the degree of Atmospheric contamination say 30,000,000 years ago (except in as much as what is found varies from what he believes it should show) so IMO he cannot know as assuredly as he expects us to accept.

When he says &#8220;by subtracting the appropriate amount&#8221; he is saying the one that gets the result not the one he can KNOW was there at that time. Do you see the reasoning for my question? It is legitimate reasoning not an accusation from some CS mill. IMO his logic is faulty due to what cannot be known and by who defines what is appropriate.

He then goes on to say, &#8220;This correction can be made very accurately and has no appreciable effect on the calculated age unless the atmospheric argon is a very large proportion.&#8221; See how he refers to this subtraction process as a correction and then goes on to say &#8220;unless&#8230;a very large proportion&#8221; which it most certainly could have been at any time in the most remote past. The correction process is usually based on what Einstein called the fudge factor like the one he required to make relativity fit before he discovered the universe was not eternal (hubble changed everything). So for me, so far as such a correction being made and having no effect on the calculated age tells me two things&#8230;

a) He already has a calculated age he is comparing to&#8230;where variance requires correction...and
b) This process is thus not used to determine the appropriate age but to agree with the calculated age or to refute the calculated age's difference by explanation (which is theory) as to why the two do not coincide (assuming the calculated age is in error)

For me this poses a problem&#8230;IMO there is a degree of stacking the deck involved. Having the expected age already pre-decided he subtracts accordingly not factually KNOWING the degree of &#8220;contamination&#8221; at all times&#8230;do you see this? This process allows the geochronologist to &#8220;assign&#8221; chronological error to the calculated age where they do not agree&#8230;You don&#8217;t see this as oddly convenient? That this technique allows them to assert their view as superior or correct without actual proof? Oh I know the "method" produces the desired results, but that is not that same thing (although it convinces many who already believe it does).

He tells us that a "requirement" is to know the atmospheric composition trapped in the rocks &#8220;when it forms&#8221; which my friend (be honest for your own sake) he just cannot not KNOW with real confidence&#8230;.

The Rb-Sr method however seems much more precise and believable and I found no questions with the reasoning or the process (not that it is mine to judge)&#8230;I would not argue with these results&#8230;.IMO...

Sorry I stopped here and slipped over to Stassen&#8217;s Isochron article which I was not able to finish (which subject I indeed want to know more about) and I will look at his critics as well (outside of Talk Origins)

Thanks

Paul
 
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pshun2404

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Okay so calibration is important...it was said that I don't understand how the calibration process works. And then was told (by someone who does apparently)

Tree rings are the standard. We can test individual rings, because only the outer ring is still "alive" absorbing the atmospheric C14. So, when we test the individual rings, we can know what the atmosphere was like when that ring was the outermost ring, collecting the C14.

However as I knowingly pointed out, beyond about 10,000 years (actually way less but I was being liberal) the trees are now silica and cannot yield truly accurate C-14 assessment. Therefore using C-14 from tree rings in fossils as "the standard" is either erroneous or else fallacious but one thing I am sure of it is not accurate. This just demonstrates further a need to interpret the actual data to fit the preconceived conclusion.

Pauls
 
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46AND2

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Listen guys, I agree with much of these last two posts and yes, I pray we never stop questioning or being allowed to question...and who knows how long a yom (day) is (Biblically) since Moses himself uses the word to mean time, an extended period, and epoch, and even as for ever...so I have no problem with the earth being millions or billions of years old but as for reporting the contamination I think if you look closely you will find they give explanations for it and times when it is indicated but its not an etched in stone (pun intended) established fact these are the accurate truth but derived though mathematical formulas which work as far as agreeing with what they expected so for me this is still suspect.

I did read half of Dalrymple's article and then got sideswiped and will read the rest but I did have some issues with one section and maybe I misunderstood what he was trying to say so here goes...

Dalrymple says &#8220;This correction is easily made by measuring the amount of 36Ar present and, using the known isotopic composition of atmospheric argon (40Ar/ 36Ar = 295.5), subtracting the appropriate amount of 40Ar due to atmospheric contamination.&#8221;

I believe he assumes this solves the problem and believes the results, but he cannot actually determine the degree of Atmospheric contamination say 30,000,000 years ago (except in as much as what is found varies from what he believes it should show) so IMO he cannot know as assuredly as he expects us to accept.

When he says &#8220;by subtracting the appropriate amount&#8221; he is saying the one that gets the result not the one he can KNOW was there at that time. Do you see the reasoning for my question? It is legitimate reasoning not an accusation from some CS mill. IMO his logic is faulty due to what cannot be known and by who defines what is appropriate.

He then goes on to say, &#8220;This correction can be made very accurately and has no appreciable effect on the calculated age unless the atmospheric argon is a very large proportion.&#8221; See how he refers to this subtraction process as a correction and then goes on to say &#8220;unless&#8230;a very large proportion&#8221; which it most certainly could have been at any time in the most remote past. The correction process is usually based on what Einstein called the fudge factor like the one he required to make relativity fit before he discovered the universe was not eternal (hubble changed everything). So for me, so far as such a correction being made and having no effect on the calculated age tells me two things&#8230;

a) He already has a calculated age he is comparing to&#8230;where variance requires correction...and
b) This process is thus not used to determine the appropriate age but to agree with the calculated age or to refute the calculated age's difference by explanation (which is theory) as to why the two do not coincide (assuming the calculated age is in error)

For me this poses a problem&#8230;IMO there is a degree of stacking the deck involved. Having the expected age already pre-decided he subtracts accordingly not factually KNOWING the degree of &#8220;contamination&#8221; at all times&#8230;do you see this? This process allows the geochronologist to &#8220;assign&#8221; chronological error to the calculated age where they do not agree&#8230;You don&#8217;t see this as oddly convenient? That this technique allows them to assert their view as superior or correct without actual proof? Oh I know the "method" produces the desired results, but that is not that same thing (although it convinces many who already believe it does).

He tells us that a "requirement" is to know the atmospheric composition trapped in the rocks &#8220;when it forms&#8221; which my friend (be honest for your own sake) he just cannot not KNOW with real confidence&#8230;.

The Rb-Sr method however seems much more precise and believable and I found no questions with the reasoning or the process (not that it is mine to judge)&#8230;I would not argue with these results&#8230;.IMO...

Sorry I stopped here and slipped over to Stassen&#8217;s Isochron article which I was not able to finish (which subject I indeed want to know more about) and I will look at his critics as well (outside of Talk Origins)

Thanks

Paul

I understand your concern about the atmospheric Argon, and it could potentially be an issue if this was the only method that we use. But it really isn't an issue for a couple of reasons:

1. First of all, they don't really assume that it has remained the same. They perform studies, and form graphs much like calibration charts through data collection, and the results are getting more accurate all the time. As in this study, here (I will try to find a copy of this which is not behind a paywall, when I have a bit more time):

ScienceDirect.com - Quaternary Geochronology - The isotopic composition of atmospheric argon and 40Ar/39Ar geochronology: Time for a change?

Also, part of the error tolerance given for K/Ar is to take the variation of atmospheric argon into account.

2. Correlating data with multiple other isotopic methods like Rb/Sr, U/Pb, Pb/Pb, etc., corroborates the atmospheric argon correction, since those other methods are not affected by atmospheric argon, obviously. In other words, if the atmospheric argon had changed far more significantly than we thought, then the K/Ar dates would never match up with the other methods. But this is not the case. We consistently see convergent results between the atmospheric argon corrected K/Ar dates, and the other isotopic dates.

Each method has it's own weaknesses. Fortunately, we have many methods, and the weaknesses of one are the strengths of another. It is specifically because of this fact that we are able to make necessary corrections for the weaknesses of each of the methods.
 
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46AND2

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Okay so calibration is important...it was said that I don't understand how the calibration process works. And then was told (by someone who does apparently)

Tree rings are the standard. We can test individual rings, because only the outer ring is still "alive" absorbing the atmospheric C14. So, when we test the individual rings, we can know what the atmosphere was like when that ring was the outermost ring, collecting the C14.

However as I knowingly pointed out, beyond about 10,000 years (actually way less but I was being liberal) the trees are now silica and cannot yield truly accurate C-14 assessment. Therefore using C-14 from tree rings in fossils as "the standard" is either erroneous or else fallacious but one thing I am sure of it is not accurate. This just demonstrates further a need to interpret the actual data to fit the preconceived conclusion.

Pauls

I don't think this is correct. Can you please let me know where you got this info?
 
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46AND2

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Okay so calibration is important...it was said that I don't understand how the calibration process works. And then was told (by someone who does apparently)

Tree rings are the standard. We can test individual rings, because only the outer ring is still "alive" absorbing the atmospheric C14. So, when we test the individual rings, we can know what the atmosphere was like when that ring was the outermost ring, collecting the C14.

However as I knowingly pointed out, beyond about 10,000 years (actually way less but I was being liberal) the trees are now silica and cannot yield truly accurate C-14 assessment. Therefore using C-14 from tree rings in fossils as "the standard" is either erroneous or else fallacious but one thing I am sure of it is not accurate. This just demonstrates further a need to interpret the actual data to fit the preconceived conclusion.

Pauls

By the way, I do apologize for the condescending tone. I try to avoid that, since I would never speak that way to someone in person, but sometimes it slips my mind that there are real people with real feelings on the other side of the message board and the tone can bleed through.

You have been reasonable during the continuation of the conversation, and my aggression was uncalled for; particularly since it was the first post in which I addressed your comments.
 
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pshun2404

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Tree rings are the standard. We can test individual rings, because only the outer ring is still "alive" absorbing the atmospheric C14. So, when we test the individual rings, we can know what the atmosphere was like when that ring was the outermost ring, collecting the C14.

Then you asked, "I don't think this is correct. Can you please let me know where you got this info?"

It was from you in post 135. I assumed you were speaking from a position of understanding...

Paul
 
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46AND2

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Tree rings are the standard. We can test individual rings, because only the outer ring is still "alive" absorbing the atmospheric C14. So, when we test the individual rings, we can know what the atmosphere was like when that ring was the outermost ring, collecting the C14.

Then you asked, "I don't think this is correct. Can you please let me know where you got this info?"

It was from you in post 135. I assumed you were speaking from a position of understanding...

Paul

Sorry, should have been more specific. I was referring to this:

beyond about 10,000 years (actually way less but I was being liberal) the trees are now silica and cannot yield truly accurate C-14 assessment.
 
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pshun2404

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Fossilized trees have usually already become petrified (from petro as in turns to rock), and actually trees in sedimentary layers do this in about 100 years but I was being gracious by saying beyond 10,000 so actually C-14 and tree rings in the fossil record are useless and irrelevant and so for this data to be "standard" in any dating process of much older layers is (I hate to say this in an accusatory tone) bad science...data from such a process added into a graph can only mislead the results (but contrived data which most would just believe blindly could be used to change the calibration results.Maybe with motive?).

Paul
 
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46AND2

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Fossilized trees have usually already become petrified (from petro as in turns to rock), and actually trees in sedimentary layers do this in about 100 years but I was being gracious by saying beyond 10,000 so actually C-14 and tree rings in the fossil record are useless and irrelevant and so for this data to be "standard" in any dating process of much older layers is (I hate to say this in an accusatory tone) bad science...data from such a process added into a graph can only mislead the results (but contrived data which most would just believe blindly could be used to change the calibration results.Maybe with motive?).

Paul

I know what you were getting at...I was looking for a source. But now that you have been more specific, can you instead provide your support for the above bold?
 
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46AND2

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Fossilized trees have usually already become petrified (from petro as in turns to rock), and actually trees in sedimentary layers do this in about 100 years but I was being gracious by saying beyond 10,000 so actually C-14 and tree rings in the fossil record are useless and irrelevant and so for this data to be "standard" in any dating process of much older layers is (I hate to say this in an accusatory tone) bad science...data from such a process added into a graph can only mislead the results (but contrived data which most would just believe blindly could be used to change the calibration results.Maybe with motive?).

Paul

By the way, academic dishonesty is a pretty big claim. Do you really believe that dendrochronologists are claiming accurate carbon dating samples from petrified wood? Or is it possible that you are mistaken that the samples used are petrified?

Frankly, I find your claim preposterous; I mean truly astoundingly so. That scientists would be SO incompetent to make that mistake (and really, it would not be a mistake, but straight dishonesty, since it is well known that petrified wood cannot be carbon dated). But if you can support it, I'll look further into it.
 
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