Related articles:
People who ask about carbon-14 (14C) dating usually
want to know about the radiometric1 dating
methods that are claimed to give millions and billions of years—carbon
dating can only give thousands of years. People wonder how millions of
years could be squeezed into the biblical account of history.
Clearly, such huge time periods cannot be fitted into the Bible
without compromising what the Bible says about the goodness of God and the origin
of sin, death and suffering—the reason Jesus came into the world.
Christians, by definition, take the statements of Jesus Christ seriously. He said,
‘But from the beginning of the creation God made
them male and female’ (Mark 10:6). This only makes sense with a time-line
beginning with the creation week thousands of years ago. It makes no sense at
all if man appeared at the end of billions of years.
We will
deal with carbon dating first and then with the other dating methods.
How the carbon clock works
Carbon
has unique properties that are essential for life on earth. Familiar to us as
the black substance in charred wood, as diamonds, and the graphite in ‘lead’
pencils, carbon comes in several forms, or isotopes. One rare form has atoms that
are 14 times as heavy as hydrogen atoms: carbon-14, or 14C, or radiocarbon.
Carbon-14 is made when cosmic rays knock neutrons out of atomic
nuclei in the upper atmosphere. These displaced neutrons, now moving fast, hit
ordinary nitrogen (14N) at lower altitudes, converting it into 14C.
Unlike common carbon (12C), 14C is unstable and slowly decays,
changing it back to nitrogen and releasing energy. This instability makes it radioactive.
Ordinary carbon (12C) is found in the carbon dioxide
(CO2) in the air, which is taken up by plants, which in turn are eaten
by animals. So a bone, or a leaf or a tree, or even a piece of wooden furniture,
contains carbon. When the 14C has been formed, like ordinary carbon
(12C), it combines with oxygen to give carbon dioxide (14CO2),
and so it also gets cycled through the cells of plants and animals.
We can take a sample of air, count how many 12C atoms there are for
every 14C atom, and calculate the 14C/12C ratio.
Because 14C is so well mixed up with 12C, we expect to find
that this ratio is the same if we sample a leaf from a tree, or a part of your
body.
In living things, although 14C atoms are constantly
changing back to 14N, they are still exchanging carbon with their surroundings,
so the mixture remains about the same as in the atmosphere. However, as soon as
a plant or animal dies, the 14C atoms which decay are no longer replaced,
so the amount of 14C in that once-living thing decreases as time goes
on. In other words, the 14C/12C ratio gets smaller. So,
we have a ‘clock’ which starts ticking the moment something dies.
Obviously, this works only for things which were once living. It cannot be used
to date volcanic rocks, for example.
The rate of decay of 14C is such that half of
an amount will convert back to 14N in 5,730 years (plus or
minus 40 years). This is the ‘half-life.’ So, in two half-lives,
or 11,460 years, only one-quarter will be left. Thus, if the amount of
14C relative to 12C in a sample is one-quarter of
that in living organisms at present, then it has a theoretical age of
11,460 years. Anything over about 50,000 years old, should theoretically
have no detectable 14C left. That is why radiocarbon dating
cannot give millions of years. In fact, if a sample contains 14C,
it is good evidence that it is not millions of years old.
However, things are not quite so simple. First, plants discriminate against carbon
dioxide containing 14C. That is, they take up less than would be expected
and so they test older than they really are. Furthermore, different types of plants
discriminate differently. This also has to be corrected for.2
Second, the ratio of 14C/12C in the atmosphere
has not been constant—for example, it was higher before the industrial era
when the massive burning of fossil fuels released a lot of carbon dioxide that
was depleted in 14C. This would make things which died at that time
appear older in terms of carbon dating. Then there was a rise in 14CO2
with the advent of atmospheric testing of atomic bombs in the 1950s.3
This would make things carbon-dated from that time appear younger than their true
age.
Measurement of 14C in historically dated objects
(e.g., seeds in the graves of historically dated tombs) enables the level of 14C
in the atmosphere at that time to be estimated, and so partial calibration of
the ‘clock’ is possible. Accordingly, carbon dating carefully applied
to items from historical times can be useful. However, even with such historical
calibration, archaeologists do not regard 14C dates as absolute because
of frequent anomalies. They rely more on dating methods that link into historical
records.
Outside the range of recorded history, calibration of
the 14C clock is not possible.4
Other factors affecting carbon dating
The amount of cosmic rays penetrating
the earth’s atmosphere affects the amount of 14C produced and
therefore dating the system. The amount of cosmic rays reaching the earth varies
with the sun’s activity, and with the earth's passage through magnetic clouds
as the solar system travels around the Milky Way galaxy.
The
strength of the earth’s magnetic field affects the amount of cosmic rays
entering the atmosphere. A stronger magnetic field deflects more cosmic rays away
from the earth. Overall, the energy of the earth’s magnetic field has been
decreasing,5 so more 14C is being produced now than
in the past. This will make old things look older than they really are.
Also, the Genesis flood would have greatly upset the carbon balance. The flood
buried a huge amount of carbon, which became coal, oil, etc., lowering the total
12C in the biosphere (including the atmosphere—plants regrowing
after the flood absorb CO2, which is not replaced by the decay of the
buried vegetation). Total 14C is also proportionately lowered at this
time, but whereas no terrestrial process generates any more 12C, 14C
is continually being produced, and at a rate which does not depend on carbon levels
(it comes from nitrogen). Therefore, the 14C/12C ratio in
plants/animals/the atmosphere before the flood had to be lower than what it is
now.
Unless this effect (which is additional to the magnetic
field issue just discussed) were corrected for, carbon dating of fossils formed
in the flood would give ages much older than the true ages.
Creationist
researchers have suggested that dates of 35,000 - 45,000 years should be re-calibrated
to the biblical date of the flood.6 Such a re-calibration makes
sense of anomalous data from carbon dating—for example, very discordant ‘dates’
for different parts of a frozen musk ox carcass from Alaska and an inordinately
slow rate of accumulation of ground sloth dung pellets in the older layers of
a cave where the layers were carbon dated.7
Also, volcanoes emit much CO2 depleted in 14C. Since the
flood was accompanied by much volcanism, fossils formed in the early post-flood
period would give radiocarbon ages older than they really are.
In summary, the carbon-14 method, when corrected for the effects of the flood,
can give useful results, but needs to be applied carefully. It does not give dates
of millions of years and when corrected properly fits well with the biblical flood.
Other radiometric dating methods
There are various other
radiometric dating methods used today to give ages of millions or billions of
years for rocks. These techniques, unlike carbon dating, mostly use the relative
concentrations of parent and daughter products in radioactive decay chains. For
example, potassium-40 decays to argon-40; uranium-238 decays to lead-206 via other
elements like radium; uranium-235 decays to lead-207; rubidium-87 decays to strontium-87;
etc. These techniques are applied to igneous rocks, and are normally seen as giving
the time since solidification.
The isotope concentrations can
be measured very accurately, but isotope concentrations are not dates. To derive
ages from such measurements, unprovable assumptions have to be made such as:
The starting conditions are known (for example, that
there was no daughter isotope present at the start, or that we know how much was
there). Decay rates have always been constant. Systems were closed or isolated so that no parent or daughter
isotopes were lost or added.
There are patterns in the isotope data
There is plenty of evidence that the
radioisotope dating systems are not the infallible techniques many think, and
that they are not measuring millions of years. However, there are still patterns
to be explained. For example, deeper rocks often tend to give older ‘ages.’
Creationists agree that the deeper rocks are generally older, but not by millions
of years. Geologist John Woodmorappe, in his devastating critique of radioactive
dating,8 points out that there are other large-scale trends
in the rocks that have nothing to do with radioactive decay.
‘Bad’ dates
When a ‘date’ differs from that expected, researchers
readily invent excuses for rejecting the result. The common application
of such posterior reasoning shows that radiometric dating has serious
problems. Woodmorappe cites hundreds of examples of excuses used to explain
‘bad’ dates.9
For example, researchers applied posterior reasoning to the dating
of Australopithecus ramidus fossils.10 Most samples
of basalt closest to the fossil-bearing strata give dates of about 23 Ma (Mega
annum, million years) by the argon-argon method. The authors decided
that was ‘too old,’ according to their beliefs about the place of the
fossils in the evolutionary grand scheme of things. So they looked at some basalt
further removed from the fossils and selected 17 of 26 samples to get an acceptable
maximum age of 4.4 Ma. The other nine samples again gave much older dates but
the authors decided they must be contaminated and discarded them. That is how
radiometric dating works. It is very much driven by the existing long-age world
view that pervades academia today.
A similar story surrounds
the dating of the primate skull known as KNM-ER 1470.11 This
started with an initial 212 to 230 Ma, which, according to the fossils,
was considered way off the mark (humans ‘weren’t around then’).
Various other attempts were made to date the volcanic rocks in the area. Over
the years an age of 2.9 Ma was settled upon because of the agreement between several
different published studies (although the studies involved selection of ‘good’
from ‘bad’ results, just like Australopithecus ramidus, above).
However, preconceived notions about human evolution could not
cope with a skull like 1470 being ‘that old.’ A study of pig fossils
in Africa readily convinced most anthropologists that the 1470 skull was much
younger. After this was widely accepted, further studies of the rocks brought
the radiometric age down to about 1.9 Ma—again several studies ‘confirmed’
this date. Such is the dating game.
Are we suggesting
that evolutionists are conspiring to massage the data to get what they want? No,
not generally. It is simply that all observations must fit the prevailing paradigm.
The paradigm, or belief system, of molecules-to-man evolution over eons of time,
is so strongly entrenched it is not questioned—it is a ‘fact.’
So every observation must fit this paradigm. Unconsciously, the researchers,
who are supposedly ‘objective scientists’ in the eyes of the public,
select the observations to fit the basic belief system.
We must
remember that the past is not open to the normal processes of experimental science,
that is, repeatable experiments in the present. A scientist cannot do experiments
on events that happened in the past. Scientists do not measure the age of rocks,
they measure isotope concentrations, and these can be measured extremely accurately.
However, the ‘age’ is calculated using assumptions about the past that
cannot be proven.
We should remember God’s admonition to
Job, ‘Where were you when I laid the foundations
of the earth?’ (Job 38:4).
Those involved with unrecorded
history gather information in the present and construct stories about the past.
The level of proof demanded for such stories seems to be much less than for studies
in the empirical sciences, such as physics, chemistry, molecular biology, physiology,
etc.
Williams, an expert in the environmental fate of radioactive
elements, identified 17 flaws in the isotope dating reported in just three widely
respected seminal papers that supposedly established the age of the earth at 4.6
billion years.12 John Woodmorappe has produced an incisive
critique of these dating methods.13 He exposes hundreds of
myths that have grown up around the techniques. He shows that the few ‘good’
dates left after the ‘bad’ dates are filtered out could easily be explained
as fortunate coincidences.
What date would you like?
The forms issued by radioisotope laboratories for submission with samples to be
dated commonly ask how old the sample is expected to be. Why? If the techniques
were absolutely objective and reliable, such information would not be necessary.
Presumably, the laboratories know that anomalous dates are common, so they need
some check on whether they have obtained a ‘good’ date.
Testing radiometric dating methods
If the long-age dating techniques
were really objective means of finding the ages of rocks, they should work in
situations where we know the age. Furthermore, different techniques should consistently
agree with one another.
Methods should work reliably on things of known age
There are many examples where the dating methods give ‘dates’ that are
wrong for rocks of known age. One example is K-Ar ‘dating’ of five historical
andesite lava flows from Mount Nguaruhoe in New Zealand. Although one lava flow
occurred in 1949, three in 1954, and one in 1975, the ‘dates’ range
from less than 0.27 to 3.5 Ma.14
Again, using
hindsight, it is argued that ‘excess’ argon from the magma (molten rock)
was retained in the rock when it solidified. The secular scientific literature
lists many examples of excess argon causing dates of millions of years in rocks
of known historical age.15 This excess appears to have come
from the upper mantle, below the earth’s crust. This is consistent with a
young world—the argon has had too little time to escape.16
If excess argon can cause exaggerated dates for rocks of known age, then
why should we trust the method for rocks of unknown age?
Other techniques, such as the use of isochrons,17 make different
assumptions about starting conditions, but there is a growing recognition that
such ‘foolproof’ techniques can also give ‘bad’ dates. So
data are again selected according to what the researcher already believes about
the age of the rock.
Geologist Dr Steve Austin sampled basalt
from the base of the Grand Canyon strata and from the lava that spilled over the
edge of the canyon. By evolutionary reckoning, the latter should be a billion
years younger than the basalt from the bottom. Standard laboratories analyzed
the isotopes. The rubidium-strontium isochron technique suggested that the recent
lava flow was 270 Ma older than the basalts beneath the Grand Canyon—an
impossibility.
Different dating techniques should consistently agree
If the dating methods are an objective and reliable means of determining ages,
they should agree. If a chemist were measuring the sugar content of blood, all
valid methods for the determination would give the same answer (within the limits
of experimental error). However, with radiometric dating, the different techniques
often give quite different results.
In the study of the Grand
Canyon rocks by Austin, different techniques gave different results.18
Again, all sorts of reasons can be suggested for the ‘bad’ dates, but
this is again posterior reasoning. Techniques that give results that can be dismissed
just because they don’t agree with what we already believe cannot be considered
objective.
In Australia, some wood found in Tertiary basalt was clearly
buried in the lava flow that formed the basalt, as can be seen from the
charring. The wood was ‘dated’ by radiocarbon (14C)
analysis at about 45,000 years old, but the basalt was ‘dated’
by potassium-argon method at 45 million years old!19
Isotope
ratios or uraninite crystals from the Koongarra uranium body in the Northern Territory
of Australia gave lead-lead isochron ages of 841 Ma, plus or minus 140 Ma.20
This contrasts with an age of 1550-1650 Ma based on other isotope ratios,21
and ages of 275, 61, 0,0, and 0 Ma for thorium/lead (232Th/208Pb)
ratios in five uraninite grains. The latter figures are significant because thorium-derived
dates should be the more reliable, since thorium is less mobile than the uranium
minerals that are the parents of the lead isotopes in lead-lead system.22
The ‘zero’ ages in this case are consistent with the Bible.
More evidence something is wrong—14C in fossils supposedly
millions of years old
Fossils older than 100,000 years should have too little 14C to measure, but dating labs consistently find 14C, well above background levels, in fossils supposedly many millions of years old.23,24 For example, no source of coal has been found that lacks 14C,
yet this fossil fuel supposedly ranges up to hundreds of millions of
years old. Fossils in rocks dated at 1–500 Ma by long-age radioisotope
dating methods gave an average radiocarbon ‘age’ of about 50,000 years,
much less than the limits of modern carbon dating24 (see pp. 65–69 in The Revised and Expanded Answers Book
for why even these radiocarbon ages are inflated). Furthermore, there
was no pattern of younger to older in the carbon dates that correlated
with the evolutionary/uniformitarian ‘ages’.24
This
evidence is consistent with the fossil-bearing rock layers being formed
in the year-long global catastrophe of the biblical Flood, as flood
geologists since Nicholas Steno (1631–1687) have recognized.
Even Precambrian (‘older than 545 Ma’) graphite, which is not of organic origin, contains 14C above background levels.25
This is consistent with Earth itself being only thousands of years old,
as a straightforward reading of the Bible would suggest.
Many physical evidence contradict the ‘billions of years’
Of the methods that have been used to estimate
the age of the earth, 90 percent point to an age far less than the billions of
years asserted by evolutionists. A few of them follow.
Evidence for a rapid formation of geological strata, as in the
biblical flood. Some of the evidence are: lack of erosion between rock layers
supposedly separated in age by many millions of years; lack of disturbance of
rock strata by biological activity (worms, roots, etc.); lack of soil layers;
polystrate fossils (which traverse several rock layers vertically—these could
not have stood vertically for eons of time while they slowly got buried); thick
layers of ‘rock’ bent without fracturing, indicating that the rock was
all soft when bent; and more. For more, see books by geologists Morris26
and Austin.27
Red
blood cells and hemoglobin have been found in some (unfossilized!) dinosaur bone.
But these could not last more than a few thousand years—certainly not the
65 Ma since the last dinosaurs lived, according to evolutionists.28
The earth’s magnetic field has been decaying so fast that
it looks like it is less than 10,000 years old. Rapid reversals during the Flood
year and fluctuations shortly after would have caused the field energy to drop
even faster.29, 30
Radioactive
decay releases helium into the atmosphere, but not much is escaping. The total
amount in the atmosphere is 1/2000th of that expected if the universe is really
billions of years old. This helium originally escaped from rocks. This happens
quite fast, yet so much helium is still in some rocks that it has not had time
to escape—certainly not billions of years.30
A supernova is an explosion of a massive star—the explosion
is so bright that it briefly outshines the rest of the galaxy. The supernova remnants
(SNRs) should keep expanding for hundreds of thousands of years, according to
physical equations. Yet there are no very old, widely expanded (Stage 3) SNRs,
and few moderately old (Stage 1) ones in our galaxy, the Milky Way, or in its
satellite galaxies, the Magellanic Clouds. This is just what we would expect for
‘young’ galaxies that have not existed long enough for wide expansion.31
The moon is slowly receding from the earth at about
4 centimeters (1.5 inches) per year, and this rate would have been
greater in the past. But even if the moon had started receding from
being in contact with the earth, it would have taken only 1.37 billion
years to reach its present distance from the earth. This gives a maximum
age of the moon, not the actual age. This is far too young for evolutionists
who claim the moon is 4.6 billion years old. It is also much younger
than the radiometric ‘dates’ assigned to moon rocks.32
Salt is entering the sea much faster than it is escaping. The
sea is not nearly salty enough for this to have been happening for billions of
years. Even granting generous assumptions to evolutionists, the sea could not
be more than 62 Ma years old—far younger than the billions of years believed
by the evolutionists. Again, this indicates a maximum age, not the actual age.33
Dr Russell Humphreys
gives other processes inconsistent with billions of years in the pamphlet
Evidence
for a Young World.34
Creationists cannot prove the age of the earth using a particular scientific method,
any more than evolutionists can. They realize that all science is tentative because
we do not have all the data, especially when dealing with the past. This is true
of both creationist and evolutionist scientific arguments—evolutionists have
had to abandon many ‘proofs’ for evolution just as creationists have
also had to modify their arguments. The atheistic evolutionist W.B. Provine admitted:
‘Most of what I learned of the field [evolutionary biology] in graduate (1964-68)
school is either wrong or significantly changed.’ 35
Creationists understand the limitations of dating methods better
than evolutionists who claim that they can use processes observed in the present
to ‘prove’ that the earth is billions of years old. In reality, all
dating methods, including those that point to a young earth, rely on unprovable
assumptions.
Creationists ultimately date the earth historically
using the chronology of the Bible. This is because they believe that this is an
accurate eyewitness account of world history, which bears the evidence within
it that it is the Word of God, and therefore totally reliable and error-free.
Then what do the radiometric ‘dates’ mean?
What do the radiometric dates of millions of years mean,
if they are not true ages? To answer this question, it is necessary to
scrutinize further the experimental results from the various dating techniques,
the interpretations made on the basis of the results and the assumptions
underlying those interpretations.
The isochron dating technique was thought to be infallible because it supposedly
covered the assumptions about starting conditions and closed systems.
Geologist Dr Andrew
Snelling worked on dating the Koongarra uranium deposits in the Northern
Territory of Australia, primarily using the uranium-thorium-lead (U-Th-Pb)
method. He found that even highly weathered soil samples from the area,
which are definitely not closed systems, gave apparently valid ‘isochron’
lines with ‘ages’ of up to 1,445 Ma.
Such ‘false
isochrons’ are so common that a whole terminology has grown up to describe
them, such as apparent isochron, mantle isochron, pseudoisochron, secondary isochron,
inherited isochron, erupted isochron, mixing line and mixing isochron. Zheng wrote:
Some of the basic assumptions of the conventional
Rb-Sr [rubidium-strontium] isochron method have to be modified and an observed
isochron does not certainly define valid age information for a geological system,
even if a goodness of fit of the experimental results is obtained in plotting
87Sr/86Sr. This problem cannot be overlooked, especially
in evaluating the numerical time scale. Similar questions can also arise in applying
Sm-Nd [samarium-neodymium] and U-Pb [uranium-lead] isochron methods.37
Clearly, there are factors other than age responsible for
the straight lines obtained from graphing isotope ratios. Again, the only
way to know if an isochron is ‘good’ is by comparing the result
with what is already believed.
Another
currently popular dating method is the uranium-lead concordia technique. This
effectively combines the two uranium-lead decay series into one diagram. Results
that lie on the concordia curve have the same age according to the two lead series
and are called ‘concordant.’ However, the results from zircons (a type
of gemstone), for example, generally lie off the concordia curve—they are
discordant. Numerous models, or stories, have been developed to explain such data.38
However, such exercises in story-telling can hardly be considered as objective
science that proves an old earth. Again, the stories are evaluated according to
their own success in agreeing with the existing long ages belief system.
Andrew Snelling has suggested that fractionation (sorting) of elements in the
molten state in the earth’s mantle could be a significant factor in explaining
the ratios of isotope concentrations which are interpreted as ages.
As long ago as 1966, Nobel Prize nominee Melvin Cook, professor of metallurgy
at the University of Utah, pointed out evidence that lead isotope ratios, for
example, may involve alteration by important factors other than radioactive decay.39
Cook noted that, in ores from the Katanga mine, for example, there was an abundance
of lead-208, a stable isotope, but no Thorium-232 as a source for lead-208. Thorium
has a long half-life (decays very slowly) and is not easily moved out of the rock,
so if the lead-208 came from thorium decay, some thorium should still be there.
The concentrations of lead-206, lead-207, and lead-208 suggest that the lead-208
came about by neutron capture conversion of lead-206 to lead-207 to lead-208.
When the isotope concentrations are adjusted for such conversions, the ages
calculated are reduced from some 600 Ma to recent. Other ore bodies seemed
to show similar evidence. Cook recognized that the current understanding of nuclear
physics did not seem to allow for such a conversion under normal conditions, but
he presents evidence that such did happen, and even suggests how it could happen.
Anomalies in deep rock crystals
Physicist Dr Robert
Gentry has pointed out that the amount of helium and lead in zircons from deep
bores is not consistent with an evolutionary age of 1,500 Ma for the granite rocks
in which they are found.40 The amount of lead may be consistent
with current rates of decay over millions of years, but it would have diffused
out of the crystals in that time.
Furthermore, the amount of
helium in zircons from hot rock is also much more consistent with a young earth
(helium derives from the decay of radioactive elements).
The
lead and helium results suggest that rates of radioactive decay may have been
much higher in the recent past. Humphreys has suggested that this may have occurred
during creation week and the flood. This would make things look much older than
they really are when current rates of decay are applied to dating. Whatever caused
such elevated rates of decay may also have been responsible for the lead isotope
conversions claimed by Cook (above).
Orphan radiohalos
Decaying radioactive particles in solid rock cause spherical zones of damage to
the surrounding crystal structure. A speck of radioactive element such as Uranium-238,
for example, will leave a sphere of discoloration of characteristically different
radius for each element it produces in its decay chain to lead-206.41
Viewed in cross-section with a microscope, these spheres appear as rings called
radiohalos. Dr Gentry has researched radiohalos for many years, and published
his results in leading scientific journals.42
Some of the intermediate decay products—such as the polonium isotopes—have
very short half-lives (they decay quickly). For example, 218Po has
a half-life of just 3 minutes. Curiously, rings formed by polonium decay are often
found embedded in crystals without the parent uranium halos. Now the polonium
has to get into the rock before the rock solidifies, but it cannot derive a from
a uranium speck in the solid rock, otherwise there would be a uranium halo. Either
the polonium was created (primordial, not derived from uranium), or there have
been radical changes in decay rates in the past.
Gentry has
addressed all attempts to criticize his work.43 There have
been many attempts, because the orphan halos speak of conditions in the past,
either at creation or after, perhaps even during the flood, which do not fit with
the uniformitarian view of the past, which is the basis of the radiometric dating
systems. Whatever process was responsible for the halos could be a key also to
understanding radiometric dating.44
Conclusion
There are many lines of evidence that the radiometric dates are not the objective
evidence for an old earth that many claim, and that the world is really only thousands
of years old. We don't have all the answers, but we do have the sure testimony
of the Word of God to the true history of the world.
- Also known as isotope or radioisotope
dating.
- Today, a stable carbon isotope, 13C
, is measured as an indication of the level of discrimination against
14C.
- Radiation from atomic testing, like
cosmic rays, causes the conversion of 14N to 14C.
- Tree ring dating (dendrochronology)
has been used in an attempt to extend the calibration of carbon-14
dating earlier than historical records allow, but this depends on
temporal placement of fragments of wood (from long dead trees) using
carbon-14 dating, assuming straight-line extrapolation backwards.
Then cross-matching of ring patterns is used to calibrate the carbon
‘clock’—a somewhat circular process which does not
give an independent calibration of the carbon dating system.
- K.L. McDonald and R.H. Gunst, ‘An
Analysis of the Earth's Magnetic Field from 1835 to 1965,’ ESSA
Technical Report IER 46-IES, U.S. Government Printing Office,
Washington D.C., p. 14, 1965.
- B.J. Taylor, ‘Carbon Dioxide in
the Antediluvian Atmosphere,’ Creation Research Society Quarterly,
30(4):193-197, 1994.
- R.H. Brown, ‘Correlation of C-14
Age with Real Time,’ Creation Research Society Quarterly,
29:45-47, 1992. Musk ox muscle was dated at 24,000 years, but hair
was dated at 17,000 years. Corrected dates bring the difference in
age approximately within the life span of an ox. With sloth cave dung,
standard carbon dates of the lower layers suggested less than 2 pellets
per year were produced by the sloths. Correcting the dates increased
the number to a more realistic 1.4 per day.
- J. Woodmorappe, The Mythology of
Modern Dating Methods, Institute for Creation Research, San Diego,
CA, 1999.
- Ibid.
- G. WoldeGabriel et al., ‘Ecological
and Temporal Placement of Early Pliocene Hominids at Aramis, Ethiopia,’
Nature, 371:330-333, 1994.
- M.
Lubenow, The Pigs Took It All, Creation
17(3):36-38, 1995.
M. Lubenow, Bones of Contention, Baker
Books, Grand Rapids, MI, pp. 247-266, 1993.
- A.R.
Williams, Long-age Isotope Dating Short on Credibility, CEN
Technical Journal, 6(1):2-5, 1992.
- Woodmorappe, The Mythology of Modern
Dating Methods.
- A.A.
Snelling, The Cause of Anomalous Potassium-argon ‘Ages’
for Recent Andesite Flows at Mt. Nguaruhoe, New Zealand, and the Implications
for Potassium-argon ‘Dating,’ Proc. 4th ICC, pp.503-525,
1998.
- Note 14 lists many instances. For example,
six cases were reported by D. Krummenacher, Isotopic Composition of
Argon in Modern Surface Rocks, Earth and Planetary Science Letters,
6:47-55, 1969. A large excess was reported in D.E. Fisher, Excess
Rare Gases in a Subaerial Basalt in Nigeria, Nature, 232:60-61,
1970.
- See note 14, p. 520.
- The isochron technique involves collecting
a number of rock samples from different parts of the rock unit being
dated. The concentration of a parent radioactive isotope, such as
rubidium-87, is graphed against the concentration of a daughter isotope,
such as strontium-87, for all the samples. A straight line is drawn
through these points, representing the ratio of the parent:daughter,
from which a date is calculated. If the line is of good fit and the
‘age’ is acceptable, it is a ‘good’ date.
The method involves dividing both the parent and daughter concentrations
by the concentration of a similar stable isotope—in this case,
strontium-86.
- S.A. Austin, editor, Grand Canyon:
Monument to Catastrophe, Institute for Creation Research, Santee,
CA, pp. 120-131, 1994.
- A.A.
Snelling, Radiometric Dating in Conflict,
Creation, 20(1):24-27, 1998.
- A.A.
Snelling, The Failure of U-Th-Pb ‘Dating’ at Koongarra,
Australia, CEN Technical
Journal, 9(1):71-92, 1995.
- R. Maas, Nd-Sr Isotope Constraints
on the Age and Origin of Unconformity-type Uranium Deposits in the
Alligator Rivers Uranium Field, Northern Territory, Australia, Economic
Geology, 84:64-90, 1989.
- See note 20.
- Giem, P., Carbon-14 content of fossil carbon, Origins 51:6–30, 2001.
- Baumgardner, J.R., Snelling, A.S., Humphreys, D.R., and Austin, S.A., Measurable 14C in fossilized organic materials: confirming the young earth creation-flood model, Proc. 5th ICC, pp. 127–142, 2003.
- Ibid.
- J. Morris, The Young Earth,
Master Books, Green Forest, AR, 1994.
- Austin, Grand Canyon: Monument to
Catastrophe.
- C. Wieland,
Sensational Dinosaur Blood Report,
Creation, 19(4):42-43, 1997, based on M. Schweitzer and T. Staedter,
The Real Jurassic Park, Earth, pp. 55-57, June 1997.
- D.R. Humphreys, Reversals of the Earth's
Magnetic Field During the Genesis Flood, Proc. First ICC, Pittsburgh,
PA, 2:113-126, 1986.
J.D. Sarfati, The Earth's Magnetic Field: Evidence
That the Earth Is Young, Creation, 20(2):15-19, 1998.
- L. Vardiman, The Age of the Earth’s
Atmosphere: A Study of the Helium Flux through the Atmosphere, Institute
for Creation Research, San Diego, CA, 1990.
J.D.
Sarfati, Blowing Old-earth Belief Away:
Helium Gives Evidence That the Earth is Young, Creation,
20(3):19-21, 1998.
- K. Davies, Distribution of Supernova
Remnants in the Galaxy, Proc. Third ICC, R.E. Walsh, editor,
pp. 175-184, 1994.
- D. DeYoung, The Earth-Moon System,
Proc. Second ICC, R.E. Walsh and C.L. Brooks, editors, 2:79-84,
1990. J.D. Sarfati, The
Moon: The Light That Rules the Night, Creation, 20(4):36-39,
1998.
- S.A. Austin and D.R. Humphreys, The
Sea’s Missing Salt: A Dilemma for Evolutionists, Proc. Second
ICC, 2:17-33, 1990.
J.D.
Sarfati, Salty Seas: Evidence for a Young
Earth, Creation, 21(1):16-17, 1999.
- Russell
Humphreys, Evidence
for a Young World, Answers in Genesis, 1999.
- A review of Teaching about Evolution
and the Nature of Science, National Academy of Science USA, 1998,
by Dr Will B. Provine, online at http://fp.bio.utk.edu/darwin/NAS_guidebook/provine_1.html,
February 18, 1999.
- See Woodmorappe, The Mythology of
Modern Dating Methods, for one such thorough evaluation.
- Y.F. Zheng, Influence of the Nature
of Initial Rb-Sr System on Isochron Validity, Chemical Geology,
80:1-16, p. 14, 1989.
- E. Jager and J.C. Hunziker, editors,
Lectures in Isotope Geology, U-Th-Pb Dating of Minerals, by
D. Gebauer and M. Grunenfelder, Springer Verlag, New York, pp. 105-131,
1979.
- M.A. Cook, Prehistory and Earth
Models, Max Parrish, London, 1966.
- R.V. Gentry, Creation's Tiny Mystery,
Earth Science Associates, Knoxville, TN, 1986.
- Only those that undergo alpha decay
(releasing a helium nucleus).
- Gentry, Creation's
Tiny Mystery.
- K.P. Wise, letter to the editor and replies by M. Armitage and R.V. Gentry, CEN
Technical Journal, 12(3):285-90, 1998.
- An international team of creationist
scientists is actively pursuing a creationist understanding of radioisotope
dating. Known as the RATE (Radioisotopes and the Age of The Earth)
group, it combines the skills of various physicists and geologists
to enable a multi-disciplinary approach to the subject. Interesting
insights are likely to come from such a group.
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