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Indexed Layers / Indexed Fossils: Circular?

RandFan

Mormon Atheist
Joined
Dec 18, 2001
Messages
60,135
Ok, Kent Hovind is a nut who promotes idiotic notions about Earth science. I have found many sources that thoroughly debunk a number of his theories and demonstrate him to be a prevaricator. But I haven't yet found anything to debunk his notion that science uses circular reasoning to date fossils and layers. It's been awhile since I've been in science class so forgive my naive response to Hovind's suggestion. According to Hovind, scientists uses fossils to age rock layers and science also uses rock layers to age fossils. See Lies In The Textbook. Don't we carbon date to determine the age of layers?
 
Talkorigins comes through again. Unfortunately I can't post a link until I spam the forum some more thanks to some bletcherous feature of the forum software. Grrrrrr...

But look for "Radiometric Dating and the Geological Time Scale" by Andrew MacRae (/faqs/dating.html) for the long answer and Creationist Claim CC310 (/indexcc/CC/CC310.html) in the index of creationist claims for the short answer.
 
Talkorigins comes through again. Unfortunately I can't post a link until I spam the forum some more thanks to some bletcherous feature of the forum software. Grrrrrr...

But look for "Radiometric Dating and the Geological Time Scale" by Andrew MacRae http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/dating.html for the long answer and Creationist Claim CC310 (http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CC/CC310.html) in the index of creationist claims for the short answer.

I've completed the links for you.
You only get to post links after 15 posts, there was apparently a lot of trouble with spam before they set the software like this.
 
Thanks. I suspected as much. Grrrr again. All spammers please die in a fire, thanks.
 
Talkorigins comes through again. Unfortunately I can't post a link until I spam the forum some more thanks to some bletcherous feature of the forum software. Grrrrrr...

But look for "Radiometric Dating and the Geological Time Scale" by Andrew MacRae
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/dating.html for the long answer and Creationist Claim CC310
http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CC/CC310.html) in the index of creationist claims for the short answer.
Damn, I knew about Talkorigins but didn't think of it this morning. I was searching Panda's Thumb.

:) Thanks Zombie.

JREF rarely, if ever, fails for me.
 
But I haven't yet found anything to debunk his notion that science uses circular reasoning to date fossils and layers.

Short answer: it isn't circular - the layers came first.

Many of the geologic periods, in fact, are named after regions of england. English geologists noted that certain regions of england and wales had characteristic fossils in the rocks. Then they noted that regions with the same characteristic fossils and rocks could be understood as strata under england.

The notion that these strata must have been laid down over immense stretches of time comes from a knowlege of how rocks are formed (the flood-sedimentation therory just doesn't hold water).

These geologists (and everyone else) were christians - not atheists. One popular explanation for the strata and their characteristic fossils, and the way they increase in complexity as you go vertically up the column, is that God created and recreated the earth and life on it several times. I suppose the Genesis story would be a record of the latest re-creation.

Anyway, it was after this, independedntly, that the evolution hypothesis about the origin of species came along, and it was found that this hypothesis explained the observed fossil sequence very well. So they support one another. But even without the theory of evolution, the sedimentary strata under england and their characteristic fossils would need explaining.
 
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Short answer: it isn't circular - the layers came first.

Many of the geologic periods, in fact, are named after regions of england. English geologists noted that certain regions of england and wales had characteristic fossils in the rocks. Then they noted that regions with the same characteristic fossils and rocks could be understood as strata under england.

The notion that these strata must have been laid down over immense stretches of time comes from a knowlege of how rocks are formed (the flood-sedimentation therory just doesn't hold water).

These geologists (and everyone else) were christians - not atheists. One popular explanation for the strata and their characteristic fossils, and the way they increase in complexity as you go vertically up the column, is that God created and recreated the earth and life on it several times. I suppose the Genesis story would be a record of the latest re-creation.

Anyway, it was after this, independedntly, that the evolution hypothesis about the origin of species came along, and it was found that this hypothesis explained the observed fossil sequence very well. So they support one another. But even without the theory of evolution, the sedimentary strata under england and their characteristic fossils would need explaining.
Thank you. There is no question that to listen to Kent is to get the notion that there is nothing behind his... ideas other than criticisms of science. He takes an ad hoc approach accepting what he likes and rejecting what he doesn't with NO coherent picture.

I didn't know the details you offered above but I know that there is a wealth of interconnected data to support an old earth FACT.

Again, thanks. I suppose that there are many, many such examples. Yours happens to be an important one that predates Darwin and which Darwin's theory so elegantly explained the data.

I was listening to Dawkins explain that Darwin's theory was so threatening because that it answered so many questions and was a fairly simple concept for most to understand. It didn't take a physics or math major to understand.

FWIW, I was a former ID proponent. My first debates on this forum were in defense of ID. ID simply can't stand up to intellectually honest inquiry.
 
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There is also more than just the fossils that are used to date layers, in the original time frame of study, I believe that the strata of lava flows at Etna, or someother volcano were what became evidence to overturn the short time earth.
 
Geologists do indeed use fossils to date layers and layers to date fossils. What's wrong with that? I use a clock to set my watch. Both are regulated by a time signal from a radio, generated by an atomic clock, using exactly the same physics that defines radiometric dating, which is used to age date the rocks containing the fossils, in the layers, in the first place.

He's saying my watch is wrong then? He can go screw himself. It cost me $15.99


C14 (carbon dating) is not used to date rocks, because the half life of Carbon 14 is far too short to be useful. That fact alone consigns his entire argument to the wastepaper basket, but he seems unable to see that.

Kitten is the one to ask about this. Much, much (one more time)MUCH longer half lives are required to date real rocks (as opposed to Pleistocene sands, gravels and other gardening related debris).
Google radiometric dating . Or here's a sensible summary
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/nuclear/clkroc.html

...and a not so sensible example, which does illustrate a valid point.
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/am/v1/n1/radioactive-dating

The point is, that over the odd billion years or so, a lot can happen to a rock. It doesn't just sit there. Assuming the laws of physics have not changed (and the OKLO reactor suggests they have not), radioactive decay has always happened at the rates we think it has.
Still there remain many sources of potential inaccuracy, some of them due to problems analysing the samples, some because other assumptions are wrong- most notably that the mineral we are dating has not been altered in some way since formation. (We don't really date rocks. We date minerals in the rocks. It's possible for the radiometric age of the rock and the mineral to be different. Just because you and your dog are in your car does not mean you are all the same age. )
eg a crystal in a lava forms from a chemical melt. Ten days later , another lava pulse partially melts it again. Does this reset the clock? Probably. Well- who cares about ten days over a billion years?
Nobody.
But what if , during the next billion years , our lava is gradually buried five miles deep in an area subject to high geothermal gradient , tectonic overpressure and percolation of water? (That would be superheated steam if not for the pressure). Does this reset mineral radiometric clocks? Did dinosaurs poop in the woods?
Radiometric dating is one tool in the box, but should never be trusted on its own. If only the world was so simple, how easy life would be.
It's necessary to view radiometric dates in the light of the interpreted history of the rock formation.
If you have a pile of rock, the rock on the bottom is older than the rock on the top.
Unless it's inverted.
Do whole mountain chains turn upside down? Darn right they do! And that's another shot in the head for Mr.Hovind. If we accept that radiometric dating is subject to geological interpretation, we must also accept that whole countries have FLOWED like warm toffee, in order to get so distorted that "solid" rock ends up like a concertina the wrong way up.
Rock is not solid. To a geologist, nothing is solid.Only poets think mountains last forever. And ecologists. Ye gods, where do they thing VALLEYS come from?
Where was I?
Rock deforms in a plastic fashion only at incredibly low strain rates. Hit it with a hammer and it shatters. Heat it up and hang a weight from it and guess what? It bends. But you have to wait millions of years before it bends enough to turn a whole country upside down- and of course Mr.Hovind does not have the time. Fortunately, geologists do.

Fossils. These are disgusting things found in sedimentary rocks, which no right thinking geologist gives a damn about anyway, except petroleum geologists who are basically a bunch of wooses.
In the early days of Geology, in the 18th and 19th century, nobody had maps of the geology of anywhere. Mine engineers and the like noticed that some rocks in some parts of the country (mostly Britain) looked the same as rocks elsewhere. Could this help them find coal and stuff? You bet it could.
There were recurrent patterns. There was a grey limestone- (fine building stone. Hadrian used it for the wall)- which was always found below the beds with coal. No sense looking under the limestone for coal, there was none. Find the limestone, you had to go up the succession to find coal. Both these formations had fossils, of very different types.
Nowadays we would call the grey stuff a Mississippian Limestone* and the coal and sand "Pennsylvanian" , thus proving god is American. (Grumble , spit! "Carb Limestone and Coal Measures was good enough in my day...")

Anyway. Yes. The fossils identify the layers and the layers are identified by the fossils.

You'll note I say "identify" not "date" . "Date " should be used for radiometric age dating, which , if we ever get it right, will be absolute dating. What's done using fossils is relative age dating. Cambrian is older than Ordovician is older than Silurian. None of this tells us the absolute age of anything. That's what atomic physics is for. Atomic physics works, by the way. Unless the laws of physics have changed since 1945 anyway- but in an age of miracles, who can tell?

*Trivial addendum. Blarney Castle is built of the same stuff, as is half Ireland. Is it possible Kent kissed the Blarney Stone when he was a boy and has had the gift of the gab ever since?
 
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Layers are dated relatively, and absolutely. We can tell which layer is older than which other layer because the youngers ones are generally either on top of the older ones, or cut across older ones, but geologists, so I'm told, determine the precise age of strata by radiometric dating. We know X layer is older than Y layer, but their exact ages can be often measured relatively precisely, regardless of what squishy life forms were alive at the time. Even if TOE were totally wrong, Hovind would need to content with physics.
 
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In addition, there's palaeomagnetism, which can give some indication of where the rock was , in relation to the magnetic field of the Earth, as it formed. Only works for some rocks and there are many complications. But the beauty of it is that we can actually watch whole areas of crust drifting through time and space-and the two fit together. It's not just Africa and South America that can be pushed back together: We can reconstruct huge areas of continents which have not existed for hundreds of millions of years and we can tell where they were when they split apart.

Of course we only have fragments of the story, but a consistent history is emerging and more data show up every year.

Hovind misses so much real magic with his human centred view. Continents zoom about all over the place, ricochetting off each other and causing general chaos. If only his eyes might be opened that he might see the immense FUN of it all!
Geology is fun! Science is fun! Truth is fun! He needs to get out more.
 

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