Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

Saluting Dr. Paul Giem

Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email

UD is honored to have Dr. Paul Giem as an occasional visitor. Here is Dr. Giem’s bio:

Paul Giem, medical research

Dr. Giem is assistant professor of emergency medicine at Loma Linda University. He holds a B.A. in chemistry from Union College, Nebraska, an M.A. in religion from Loma Linda University and an M.D. from Loma Linda University. Dr. Giem has published research articles in the areas of religion and medicine. His current research includes work on carbon-14 dating methods. He is author of the book Scientific Theology, which deals with a number of science–Bible areas, including dating methodology and biblical chronology.

http://creation.com/paul-giem-medical-research-in-six-days

One of the other UD commenters, franklin, is having a discussion with Dr. Giem in another thread. I invite the readers interested in scientific discussions to see the exchange. At issue is the age of particular fossils. As I’ve said before, formally speaking the age of a specific fossil is a separate question from the age of the Earth. An organism may have died recently, and it says nothing of the age of the Earth or the universe or even the age of the entire fossil record. Like agnostic Richard Milton, one does not even have to be a creationist to raise serious questions about the chronology of certain species. For example, the Coelacanth was presumed to be extinct in the late Cretaceous (105- 66 million years) ago only to be found alive today!

Darwinists are intolerant of any data point that may call into question their competence in weaving evolutionary stories. It is formally possible that life evolved, that many fossils are millions of years, but that some fossils are much younger than we have been told. That possibility is intolerable to them as symbolized by UD commenter franklin who is in the unenviable position of railing against anomalous findings of mainstream science laboratories. These anomalous findings have even been acknowledged in Darwin loving websites like Wikipedia and TalkOrigins.

I highlight one of the responses by Dr. Giem to franklin:

https://uncommondescent.com/genetics/cocktail-galaxies-evolve-in-700-million-years-horseshoe-crabs-stay-the-same-after-450-million-years/#comment-479221

We will now move to another set of (related) topics, namely,

the de novo production of carbon-14 and the problem of carbon-14 diffusion in dinosaur bones

We will start with a brief history. Carbon-14 has been used to date civilization and pre-historic human remains. It attracted creationist attention early on, although most of the focus was on the fact that carbon-14 production and decay were not in equilibrium. Later on, the apparent presence of carbon-14 in coal was noted by R. H. Brown, among others. Andrew Snelling dated several pieces of carbonaceous material in old geological settings that had significant amounts of carbon-14 in them.

At about this time, I wrote an article detailing several different creationist models for explaining carbon-14 data while keeping a short timeframe for life on earth. See
http://www.grisda.org/origins/24050.htm .
These models were testable at certain points, and I recommended testing them. One of the predictions of one set of models was that there should be a small but at least theoretically measurable amount of carbon-14 in fossil material that would not have been expected to have it by standard theory. That is to say, the difference was testable.

I then set about to review the literature, a fairly close to exhaustive review (and AFAIK the best one out there), at
http://www.grisda.org/origins/51006.htm .
I took my results to the ICR, and persuaded them that they should do a formal systematic test of radiocarbon in coal. Their response was, paraphrased, “We don’t need that data. We already have enough data. That would be like shooting fish in a barrel.” My response was, “True, but there are a lot of people who don’t believe there are any fish in that barrel.” In the end they raised money for the project and did it. One problem with their data has been detailed above. Its seriousness depends on 1. whether one is willing to believe their results, 2. whether one is willing to believe their statements about the lab background, and 3. the level of evidence one is willing to insist on (which can be related to 1.)

The willingness to believe results is not a trivial point. I remember going to a lab once to double-check (actually triple-check) a reported negative pregnancy test in a lady who seemed to have classical symptoms of pregnancy. I found out that someone had entered it into the computer in error. Similarly, the lab routinely double-checks wildly abnormal potassiums, so if one wants a STAT result and suspect the potassium will be high, one is well advised to tell the lab to report the first value as a preliminary, so as to get a jump on treating the patient properly, rather than waiting for the final report.

However, this willingness to believe results can be abused. If one starts out by absolutely insisting that one’s side is right, one can always find a flaw in the data. One is tempted to label those with contrary data liars, so as not to have to deal with the data. One can then disbelieve their data, and wind up cherry-picking data to support one’s theory, in several different ways, until one completely lines one’s cocoon with cherry-picked data. This goes for all sides.

In any case, Baumgardner et al.did their study, and the latest report was published in the RATE book.
http://www.icr.org/i/pdf/techn…..-Earth.pdf

Kathleen Hunt made her inquiry to experts about the time that the research was actually being done. Heretofore, the usual explanation for most of the data was contamination during sample processing. Depending on the lab, proven contamination may range from 0.04 pMC or less, to 0.25 pMC. But by this time some researchers were coming face to face with data that was not easily explained by laboratory contamination. Furthermore, they were having to bet either with the data and against theory, or with theory and against data. Physicists get very cautious at that point. They were having to fill the Borexino detector with some 80 tons (5+ meters in diameter) of scintillant, and if it contained as much carbon-14 as the data indicated, the experiment would be useless. They finally opted to go with methane distilled from natural gas, naturally low in carbon-13, and to an even greater extent, carbon-14. That is why they answered Kathleen Hunt the way they did.
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/c14.html

Several studies of natural gas have been published in Creation Research Society Quarterly, but the most fascinating data that has arrived are those of the Paleo Group on carbon-14 in dinosaur bones, which are hopefully well-known to the discussants here. Those bones have between 0.7 and 7 pMC, which is beyond even the worst reported contamination for a reputable lab. Therefore even if one tried to critique the Baumgardner et al. data, the critique would fail with the Paleo Group data.

An attempt was made to estimate how much carbon would likely be able to contaminate the results, and it was noted that the carbon content of the matrix outside of the bones was about 1/5th of that of the bones themselves (as far as I know, the carbon-14 content of the matrix was. Thus, it could be argued, the carbon should be diffusing out, not in.

I think this is a first approximation, but not adequate to completely rule out carbon-14 diffusion into the bones. As long as there is any carbon-14 outside, it can at least theoretically diffuse in. Diffusion can be (and usually is) a two-way street. A stronger case could have been made if the determination could have been made that the matrix had the same, or even better, less of a concentration of carbon-14. An even stronger case could be made if actual diffusion rates had been measured, although the latter would be extremely technically difficult, and the results open to challenge. That may answer one of your questions.

The second question, nuclear synthesis of carbon-14 underground, is related to the question of what to do with all this radiocarbon. One could attribute it to residual activity, but this necessitates a short age. For at 250,000 radiocarbon years, there should be less than one atom of carbon-14 per gram of carbon, and at 1 million years, if we start out with the entire earth’s mass (5.972 x 10^27 g–Wikipedia) being nothing but carbon-14, allow that 14.0 g of carbon-14 contains 6.02 x 10^23 atoms of carbon 14, we have
(5.972 x 10^27g) x (6.02 x 10^23 atoms) / 14.0 g
=2.57 x 10^50 atoms.
Taking the log2 of that, we have 167.5, which is the number of half-lives necessary to reduce this to 1 atom. 1 million years contains
1 x 10^6 years / (5730 years / half life) = 174.5 half lives, which means we have 7 half-lives (for a factor of around 128) to reduce that last atom to nitrogen-14. Residual activity means short age. Period.

So how else can we explain this carbon-14? For a long time, it was thought that contamination during sample processing accounted for all the carbon-14. But as Harry Gove, PhD and company are realizing, this is not an adequate explanation. So there are three others; machine error, contamination underground, and nuclear synthesis underground. These are discussed in my second paper. Machine error and contamination underground are discounted by most experts, leading to the only known option, nuclear synthesis underground.

There are quantitative problems with the nuclear synthesis that are detailed in both my second paper (and my book Scientific Theology before that), and in Baumgardner et al. Briefly, calculations have already been done, and the numbers of neutrons are orders of magnitude too low to account for the prevalence of carbon-14. In addition, unless the concentration of neutrons is much higher over the past 6000 years or so than in previous epochs (a, shall we say, non-uniformitarian assumption), such neutrons should have had an effect on such isotopes as cadmium 113. samarium-149, and gadolinium-157. The people who propose this have (so far) not worked out the numbers to see how many neutrons it would take to produce carbon-14 in situ. That should mostly answer the second question, although for franklin’s sake we can always go through the excruciating details if he wants.

The reader is invited to visit the original thread and decide if franklin is making a credible scientific case beyond saying “something could be wrong”. This is the same franklin who will rush to defense of OOL theories even after they’ve been discredited.

Comments
Mapou (#24), Actually, one of your premises is hard to sustain if you take vertebrates out of consideration. For instance, it is arguable that trilobites have the same order of complexity as modern insects. However, in one sense, you are right. Once an intelligent designer (or designers) is allowed, trying to measure time by naturalistically allowed rates of change becomes problematic. And considerations regarding the identity of the designer(s), and its/their ways of creating, and intentions, become much more important than scientific limitations on unguided naturalistic processes.Paul Giem
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
12:08 PM
12
12
08
PM
PDT
Scordova (17), Your reference might be missed by most people. It has to do with the Borexino neutrino detector (others can Google it). But you are correct.Paul Giem
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
12:07 PM
12
12
07
PM
PDT
SelvaRajan (#10), There are (at least) 3 options that can take the evidence for carbon-14 in fossil carbon at face value, all of which accept the idea that there was a global Flood that was responsible for a major part of the geologic column. YLC (young life creationism) only. In this theory, God resurfaced an old (4.5 billion years? why not?) earth and produced life. At the time of Genesis 1, presumably about 6-20 thousand years ago, the earth was progressively prepared for human habitation within a period of 6 days, with light reaching the (watery) surface of the earth on day 1 and the Sun being seen as a distinct object from the earth's surface on day 4. (i'm not going into the evidence for or against these various models at this time.) YEC (earth) (and YLC) but not YUC (universe). In this theory, the earth was specifically made out of nothing. Perhaps the rest of the solar system was also. But the universe, including the countless galaxies that we can see from earth, were created much earlier (13.7 billion years ago? why not?), possibly with planets around some of them, on which God may have even placed living and even intelligent creatures. YUC (which includes the other two). The entire universe, including the substance of the earth as well as all life on earth, is some 6-20 thousand years old. Personally, I am presently YEC but not YUC. That has changed. I used to be YLC only, but the biggest evidence for a long age for the earth has seemed to me to fall apart, leaving the (IMO weak) theological evidences for short age for the earth itself unopposed. I could move further to YUC, or revert to YLC only, depending on further evidence. Given that, your second model (and probably your first) profoundly misunderstands the position outlined. It is not that "species evolved fast". It is that they were created in an adaptable form, then differentiated, mostly by losing information (which is much easier and faster to do than gaining it). Similarly, the earth did not have to evolve if it was created; That might also explain why there is so much gold on the surface of the earth, when, given a molten earth, one would expect it to have sunk to the core. And, of course, in my model, redshift and cosmic background are no more problematic than they would be for a standard model. If one wishes to cogently criticize a theory, it helps to understand it. In #15, you note that fungi can apparently take atmospheric carbon dioxide and incorporate it into rotting wood which can then become coal. I'm a little surprised at that. Fungi typically oxidize the substrate on which they are feeding, and thus have no need to incorporate carbon dioxide from the air. I would like a reference. I expect you have one, as you have blockquoted the material you presented. But assuming you are right about this, there are still difficulties. First, if the fungus feeds on rotting wood but not coal, its activity would have ceased some 40 to 300 million years ago, and there should still be no leftover carbon-14. Second, if the fungus actually feeds on coal, it has to have done so within about the last 5,730 years; otherwise half the carbon-14 would have decayed away, necessitating a replacement of twice the coal to get the same carbon-14 "age". (The farther back it happens, the worse the problem becomes. At 45,000 years, one must replace all the coal.) In that case, why can't we find microscopic evidence of the fungus? And since this process has presumably been going on for the past 40 million years at least, why is there any coal left at all? And finally, are we sure that the air at 1-2 km down (one mile down) has the same ratio of carbon-14 to carbon-12 as modern air, or even remotely approaches it, in coal seams? Without answering the final question with at least a qualified yes, fungi can churn carbon dioxide into coal all they want without adding one atom of carbon-14.Paul Giem
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
12:06 PM
12
12
06
PM
PDT
Franklin (#12), I would consider that if your alternative was correct, the fossils would not be truly datable. Any dates that were obtained would be within the noise region or contamination. A truly datable fossil by carbon-14 does indicate a young age. As for #13, see the old thread.Paul Giem
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
11:59 AM
11
11
59
AM
PDT
Thanks for your response.
You're welcome. I take it that's my clue to stop commenting in this thread.Mapou
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
11:40 AM
11
11
40
AM
PDT
That being said, if the fundamentalist Christian community thinks we should do C-14 dating of the Burgess shale, by all means, do it. You guys have the financial resources. Pay for it or set up your own lab
It's being done for some eras, and I'll try to ping if anyone has done it for the Cambrian. YECs have even gone so far as to attempt to bribe Darwinists to run an independent test (i.e. Jack Horner). Horner turned down $24,000 donation to his museum to C14 date his dinos at the lab of his choice. Thanks for your response. Salscordova
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
10:56 AM
10
10
56
AM
PDT
Why can’t it be as simple as that?
It can be, but it is not as reassuring as having evidence in hand. I used to believe in Darwinian evolution. When it was shown to me, independent of the Bible, that Darwinian evolution was false, then it was easy to become a creationist, and accept that we were made by a creator. I'm glad there were those that were willing to wrestle with the evidence. I don't think I'd be a Christian today if it were not for people willing to do this. There are people willing to resolve the difficult questions, and for those on the sidelines it would be reassuring. I'm not one of those who will simply accept what other people say is true, I need some independent testimony to be assured they are telling the truth.scordova
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
10:53 AM
10
10
53
AM
PDT
Has anyone bothered to do C14 dates on these? The Cambrian is supposedly 500 million years back, the carboniferous is 300 million years back and we find C14 there. Given we find C14 in the carboniferous, why not go back just a little farther to the Cambrian?
C14 dating of carboniferous is contentious. So you cannot use it as definitive evidence. But why would anyone in their right mind want to do C14 dating of Cambrian fossils since we have a pretty good idea of the age of the rock they are embedded in? This type of sedimentary rock does not form in 7000 years, I can assure you. Neither did the Canadian Rockies, where the Burgess shale is located, rise to their present altitude in a few thousand years. That being said, if the fundamentalist Christian community thinks we should do C-14 dating of the Burgess shale, by all means, do it. You guys have the financial resources. Pay for it or set up your own lab. Personally, I will not hold my breath waiting for any revolutionary finding.Mapou
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
10:37 AM
10
10
37
AM
PDT
Hi Scordova, You make this point: "I am a young-earth creationist as a matter of faith, but I will not argue all the evidence we have in hand favors that view, in fact I’ve argued the opposite for at least two major areas: 1. distant starlight 2. long and intermediate term radioactivity" I know this is not what this post was supposed to be about, and I won't be pursuing this discussion round and round, but I would just like to lend my tupenceworth and leave you all to it. I have read these cosmological arguments many times and agree that a YEC position is almost untenable in the face of all the evidence to the contrary, but at the end of the day it is possible, and I think very possible, that God did indeed create it as such 7-8k years ago. Everything we see around us, and that which can't be seen, was created for his glory. Galaxies, black holes, supernovas etc all coming into existence, with starlight visible from earth, long and intermediate term radio activity, and everything else, made in an instant for his glory, and for us to wonder at. Why can't it be as simple as that?PeterJ
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
10:35 AM
10
10
35
AM
PDT
Cambrian fossils from the Burgess shale are obviously a lot older than 7 thousand years.
Has anyone bothered to do C14 dates on these? The Cambrian is supposedly 500 million years back, the carboniferous is 300 million years back and we find C14 there. Given we find C14 in the carboniferous, why not go back just a little farther to the Cambrian? How about we C14-date plant fossils from the Cambrian. Any guesses what we'll find. How about racemization or depurination or molecular clock date the fossils. The problem is these questions have been "settled" by the mainstream just like Darwinian evolution was "settled" by the mainstream. It is taboo to question. Let me suggest a modest proposal. I propose we not necessarily agree about the age of the fossils, I propose we re-examine the evidence, and follow the evidence wherever it leads. If the evidence says, we should doubt the mainstream, then doubt them. One is entitled to say, "I don't know what to make of it".scordova
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
09:32 AM
9
09
32
AM
PDT
scordova:
But the present discussion is looking for hints that things happened faster than presumed by the mainstream. :-) At the very least, this present discussion is trying to cast doubt on the claim that certain fossils are as old as paleontologists say they are. Whether the universe is old is a separate discussion.
Cambrian fossils from the Burgess shale are obviously a lot older than 7 thousand years. We don't need paleontologists to tell us that. Unless you have a different and falsifiable theory for the formation of geological layers over time, I find any argument to the contrary to be a sign of bad faith. I, too, have faith in God, an extremely scientific God, I might add.Mapou
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
09:25 AM
9
09
25
AM
PDT
Why stop at 7-8k years? It could have been created an hour ago with all of our false memories of our entire lives with it. This is just silly, though.
Agreed.
There are processes that are inherently sequential and whose outcomes are computationally intractable unless they are given time to run their course. But the Gods (or God) have plenty of time on their hands. What’s the hurry?
But the present discussion is looking for hints that things happened faster than presumed by the mainstream. :-) At the very least, this present discussion is trying to cast doubt on the claim that certain fossils are as old as paleontologists say they are. Whether the universe is old is a separate discussion.scordova
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
09:16 AM
9
09
16
AM
PDT
Actually, this is not really correct, given the fossil record. There was clearly an evolution from the simple to the more complex in the geological strata.
That's assuming the Darwinist/Paleontologist interpretation of the fossil record is correct to begin with! At least in the present discussion, it should be apparent that is the question in hand. Observed evolution (like anti-biotic resistance) extinction of species in the current day and observable past says complexity goes down with time. This fact conflicts with the geological interpretation that complexity increases with time, thus, like the C14 dates, we have now 3 lines of evidence contradicting the mainstream: 1. C14 2. biological material 3. the tendency for complexity to decrease over time So woven into the culture is the notion that all supposedly old fossils are really old, that when we have evidence to the contrary, we miss it. Complexity, as observed today, decreases over time. Only in paleontological stories does it increase with time. But if we view the fossils as young, the paradox goes away and all the data suddenly becomes coherent!scordova
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
09:12 AM
9
09
12
AM
PDT
PeterJ:
What I would like to ask is why can’t it be viewed as being possible that the universe, along with its properties, and laws of physics etc, couldn’t have been created as such 7-8k years ago?
Why stop at 7-8k years? It could have been created an hour ago with all of our false memories of our entire lives with it. This is just silly, though. There are processes that are inherently sequential and whose outcomes are computationally intractable unless they are given time to run their course. But the Gods (or God) have plenty of time on their hands. What's the hurry?Mapou
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
09:10 AM
9
09
10
AM
PDT
Time is the enemy for the evolution of complexity in my opinion. We see complexity decrease over time, not increase.
Actually, this is not really correct, given the fossil record. There was clearly an evolution from the simple to the more complex in the geological strata. But this is exactly what one would expect from intelligent design, is it not?Mapou
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
09:03 AM
9
09
03
AM
PDT
What I would like to ask is why can’t it be viewed as being possible that the universe, along with its properties, and laws of physics etc, couldn’t have been created as such 7-8k years ago? God created the earth, then created the universe around it, almost exactly as we see it today, albeit with a lapse of 8k years. Can someone please tell me why this can not be considered, after all it is what the bible teaches?
I am a young-earth creationist as a matter of faith, but I will not argue all the evidence we have in hand favors that view, in fact I've argued the opposite for at least two major areas: 1. distant starlight 2. long and intermediate term radioactivity https://uncommondescent.com/creationism/distant-starlight-the-thorn-in-the-side-of-yec-can-there-be-a-middle-ground/ We can argue ID based on existing scientific knowledge. We can argue youth of humanity according to existing scientific knowledge (and thus affirm the Genealogy of Christ in Luke Chapter 3). We cannot do this for the distant starlight problem or long term (billions of years )and intermediate term (milliions of years) radio-isotopes. These are nasty problems for YECs. It doesn't mean a solution might not be found someday...scordova
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
08:52 AM
8
08
52
AM
PDT
In which case your hypothesis is that species evolved/emerged within about 70,000 years or less, because given the half life of C14, it is impossible to detect C14 in samples older than 70,000 years even with expensive methodology. If your hypothesis is that life emerged within 70,000 then you need to believe :- Earth is 4.5 billion years old and all species evolved in 70,000 years – which is even more difficult to explain than Cambrian explosion!
One can postulate a unique non-repeatable mechanism for the emergence of species. UD has gone at length demonstrating the claimed mechanisms (various OOL scenarios, Darwinian evolution, neutral evolution) can't work even in principle. Perhaps one at the very least should argue that the evidence isn't a slam dunk for the current mainstream narrative. Time is the enemy for the evolution of complexity in my opinion. We see complexity decrease over time, not increase.scordova
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
08:46 AM
8
08
46
AM
PDT
selvaRajan @ 15 "My contention is if you believe in younger fossils then you are basically a Young Earth believer- the concept is completely in dissonance with current proven cosmological model." I have found this post very interesting indeed, especially having someone like Paul Giem contributing to the discussion. What I would like to ask is why can't it be viewed as being possible that the universe, along with its properties, and laws of physics etc, couldn't have been created as such 7-8k years ago? God created the earth, then created the universe around it, almost exactly as we see it today, albeit with a lapse of 8k years. Can someone please tell me why this can not be considered, after all it is what the bible teaches?PeterJ
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
08:42 AM
8
08
42
AM
PDT
Would these be composed of dead microbes that accumulated over time or are they just the by-product of microbial metabolism?
The microbes c-14 would have to be recent too since C-14 would have decayed in them in 45,000 years or so.scordova
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
08:40 AM
8
08
40
AM
PDT
The fungus Polyporus versicolor, which is the common species involved in the rotting of wood,incorporates atmospheric CO2 during its growth and thereby introduces C14 into the coal substrate. Autoclaving does not remove fungal hyphae and waste products, which contain C14 derived from atmospheric CO2. Assuming that a sample of coal contains no C14, microbial action only has to result in the deposition of 0.1% by weight of modern carbon in the coal to produce an apparent age of 45 kyr for the specimen
Atmospheric C02 in buried deposits, how about solidified amber? It may not be possible in practice, but one way to settle this is to use pure biological fossil material. That would be a very challenging biochemistry/nano-engineering project to extract only DNA or proteins from a specific creature and then date it, such that contamination is eliminated. But I've said there are two other lines of evidence: 1. the biological material itself. It's non-racemic, non-depurinated state corroborates the C-14 date. 2. we ought to be able to do molecular clock like experiments on the material. I suggested comparing extant horseshoe crab sequences against crabs that supposedly died 450 million years ago. No one is doing this, but I'll bet the result will be shocking. This is doable. Any takers? :-)scordova
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
08:37 AM
8
08
37
AM
PDT
selvaRajan @15,
Assuming that a sample of coal contains no C14, microbial action only has to result in the deposition of 0.1% by weight of modern carbon in the coal to produce an apparent age of 45 kyr for the specimen
I appreciate the explanation and I thank franklin for the links above. Let me preface this by stating that I am a Christian but I don't believe in the young earth hypothesis. I think it's pure nonsense; I think it smacks of self-righteousness and it makes us Christians look silly. God does not command us to park our brains in a closet when reading the Bible or any other book for that matter. Worshipping any book (even the Bible), let alone a particular interpretation of the book, is a form of idolatry in my opinion. But then again, I consider Darwinian evolution to be just as silly and even more idolatrous, LOL. I'm sorry if I offend anybody here but I always tell it like I see it. To continue (playing the devil's advocate), first off, a young earth proponent might contend that microbial contamination should only occur at the surface of the carboniferous deposit and that the deeper layers of the deposit that are isolated from the atmosphere should not be so contaminated. Second, 0.1% by weight sounds like very little but it's really a huge amount of contaminants considering its origin. Would these be composed of dead microbes that accumulated over time or are they just the by-product of microbial metabolism?Mapou
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
08:33 AM
8
08
33
AM
PDT
Questionable by whom, biased paleontologists or physicists needing no C-14 in their experiments? There is good reason physicists rejected use of carboniferous era coal (supposedly 300 million years old) — it had C-14 contrary to the boasting of Darwinists.
This is interesting. Can someone please critique this?
When it comes to doing real science, physicists needed to conduct an experiment that need a source of carbon that was free of carbon 14. The paleontologists would of course insist that coal from the carboniferous era (300 million years ago) was free of Carbon 14. But the experimental measurements said it wasn't free of carbon 14. When push came to shove, the physicists dissed the palanetologists/evolutionists "science" and went with the actual lab results which said the 300 million year old coal had C-14. Good for the physicists!scordova
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
08:29 AM
8
08
29
AM
PDT
JGuy, Are you asserting that universe evolved while Earth was specially created?selvaRajan
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
07:49 AM
7
07
49
AM
PDT
scordova @6 Mapou @11, Apart from possible explanations in links given by franklin @13, my favorite reason still remains this:
The fungus Polyporus versicolor, which is the common species involved in the rotting of wood,incorporates atmospheric CO2 during its growth and thereby introduces C14 into the coal substrate. Autoclaving does not remove fungal hyphae and waste products, which contain C14 derived from atmospheric CO2. Assuming that a sample of coal contains no C14, microbial action only has to result in the deposition of 0.1% by weight of modern carbon in the coal to produce an apparent age of 45 kyr for the specimen
I might add that Dr.Paul Giem has addressed the various possible explanations in his earlier posts. My contention is if you believe in younger fossils then you are basically a Young Earth believer- the concept is completely in dissonance with current proven cosmological model. Evolution can't be viewed in isolation. you need to consider universe evolution too.selvaRajan
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
07:42 AM
7
07
42
AM
PDT
selvaRajan @ 10 ...or... Simply that people don't actually know as much as many have convinced themselves that they know about cosmology... ...and that the earth & life are both young. And life was specially created (i.e. did not evolve). BTW: Ever wonder the origin of the term species? Creatures that reproduced after their kind (i.e. the biblical kind) were believed to have been specially created kinds of animals.JGuy
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
07:38 AM
7
07
38
AM
PDT
This is interesting. Can someone please critique this?
take a look at the links to Dr.Kirk Bertsche's critique of the RATE projects data here: http://www.asa3.org/ASA/education/origins/carbon-kb.htm and http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/rate-critique.html where he discusses the known, and recognized, sources of C14 contamination in samples, including coal samples.franklin
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
06:29 AM
6
06
29
AM
PDT
Paul: However, if we find that they are datable, it suggests that they aren’t as old as the standard model supposes.
or the signal is representative of the recognized noise in AMS C14 analytical procedures.franklin
November 13, 2013
November
11
Nov
13
13
2013
06:19 AM
6
06
19
AM
PDT
scordova:
Questionable by whom, biased paleontologists or physicists needing no C-14 in their experiments? There is good reason physicists rejected use of carboniferous era coal (supposedly 300 million years old) — it had C-14 contrary to the boasting of Darwinists.
This is interesting. Can someone please critique this?Mapou
November 12, 2013
November
11
Nov
12
12
2013
11:54 PM
11
11
54
PM
PDT
Dr.Paul Giem, scordova
However, if we find that they are datable, it suggests that they aren’t as old as the standard model supposes.
In which case your hypothesis is that species evolved/emerged within about 70,000 years or less, because given the half life of C14, it is impossible to detect C14 in samples older than 70,000 years even with expensive methodology. If your hypothesis is that life emerged within 70,000 then you need to believe :- Earth is 4.5 billion years old and all species evolved in 70,000 years - which is even more difficult to explain than Cambrian explosion! or Earth is young and all species evolved fast - which is in complete dissonance with existing cosmology model. You will need to explain redshift, Cosmic Background Radiation, other planets & universe age compared to Earth and how Earth achieved a mass of 5.9 X 10^24 within such a short span given that the Gravitational constant is only 6.67 X 10 ^-11 Given the difficulties in presuming younger species life, wouldn't a hypothesis of standard model be more prudent? Mapou,
Someone, please correct me if I’m wrong.
I didn't say anywhere that c14 can be used only up to 5,730 years (It is c14 half life). In fact as half life is logarithmic measure, dating will be less accurate for recent bone samples than older samplesselvaRajan
November 12, 2013
November
11
Nov
12
12
2013
11:38 PM
11
11
38
PM
PDT
Nice to have Dr Giem post here. :-)Blue_Savannah
November 12, 2013
November
11
Nov
12
12
2013
11:15 PM
11
11
15
PM
PDT
1 2 3 4

Leave a Reply