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CaptainPrudeman
Guest
I’m still asking you if it’s even possible. Thought experiments need to be within the realm of possibility.
And you never made clear which was dated or what it was. Was it an organic object or an inorganic object.Pattylt:![]()
Yes dating organic material - but everyone is avoiding the question they know I am asking. (I used the word object in my question)C14 is for organic material.
If we find an object in pot-argon rocks estimated to be1 billion years, that C14 dates to 10,000 years ago, which do we pick? (it would have to be organic to be C14 dated)If we find an object in pot-argon rocks estimated to be1 billion years, that C14 dates to 10,000 years ago, which do we pick?
Not so. We can achieve our current population in a lot less time. C14 cannot measure to 200K.I have my doubts about C-14 dating. Mainly because it is used to ‘prove’ that humanity is about 200,000 years old. Population modelling seems to contradict this. The world population should be several orders of magnitude bigger by now if that were true.
Agreed. …We don’t “pick” either one. First, we look at the circumstances to figure out why the discrepancy exists. Was there fossil fuel contamination? Could there have been some sort of rock fixture that allowed organic material into the much older rock sample? Could someone have just plain messed up? If none of those are reasonable possibilities, then we look into issues in the dating.
We return to the original question… will you answer it directly now?If none of those are reasonable possibilities, then we look into issues in the dating.
I agree. This is why I don’t trust human fossils dated over 100K. But 200K is the current ‘scientific-supported’ age of humanity.C14 cannot measure to 200K.
Carbon dating is the most cited, but really there are multiple isotopes that can be used for dating, some suited to longer or shorter periods of time, and which can be cross-referenced against each other.Fossils are found in certain layers of sediment dated using carbon dating to certain periods of prehistory. Inland sea fossils are very, very old. Older than 6000 years, that’s for sure.
If you feel like you want to argue against the validity of carbon dating, be my guest. You’ll need some strong evidence against it, though. It’s pretty well supported.
Got it… Anyone else?I don’t have one. You have provided no evidence that this is even possible, and so there’s no way to tell which one is more reliable if there’s no actual situation to test them more. How am I supposed to test a hypothetical? How are scientists? How does an impossible situation disprove the use of tried-and-true research techniques?
I think it’s to distract from the anti-Catholic, anti-Semitic, anti-Muslim website pushing crackpot theories that was posted to “prove” Moses copied Genesis from clay tablets.What was the point of this whole line of questioning?
Nonsense. These threads have subthreads all the time. We can get back to the other one soon. Don’t worry.I think it’s to distract from the anti-Catholic, anti-Semitic, anti-Muslim website pushing crackpot theories that was posted to “prove” Moses copied Genesis from clay tablets.
The goalposts have been officially moved.
Actually just went through this. They would not accept copies. Needed the official seal. I did not have one. Had to go to local government to get one and to provide them with the embossed seal. For whatever this is worth…Say you want a boating license. You take your birth certificate to the licensing authorities, but they say yours is wrong and that their copy is identical to yours but has you as 4 years younger. By your logic, I’ve now proven that birth certificates are an unreliable way of identifying someone.
Dating always has an error bar.Okay, so there was some human error. That’s what I tried to imply was happening in your carbon dating example. You insisted I consider the situation if there was no error, so now I will too. What if the certificates are both completely authentic and error-free, just like your example’s radioactive dating results?