Hi, Peter --
Urgh, sorry about calling you "new". I'm not sure why I got it into my head that you were new.
Thanks for the link. I did go over your application and I'm in the same boat as Tricky, I'm afraid: this doesn't seem to be a paranormal claim (of course, you explicitly state that it is not so), and there isn't really a test there. As Tricky has stated, this seems to be simply an attempt to point out that James Randi has been wrong in some of his statements.
And it looks like there are actually
two protocols in there: in the first, you make
four statements, demonstrate how James Randi has disagreed with them, and then propose to present those statements to qualified geologists to have them decide on the truth or falsity of those statements. You state, as your measure of success, that "Success in the test shall be demonstrating any ONE or more of the applicant's statements to be correct. Failure shall be if all four of the applicant’s statements are proved wrong."
Then, you go onto a protocol that describes randomly selecting places on Earth (known watery places such as rivers, lakes, etc to be excluded), then consulting geological surveys to determine whether the selected areas contain water that is (I'm paraphrasing here) "practically accessable".
I think that the problem lies in the fact that Randi uses his statements to rebuff/refute statements
specifically made by dowsers, not by people actually engaged in a scientific pursuit of water. In fact, one of the points about dowsing in particular is that there
are scientific ways to locate water, and that dowsers often are (sometimes unconsciously) using these methods to find water, instead of it being the results of dowsing.
I'm no geologist, but I would agree with the statement that it's quite possible to dig a well that is dry. It depends on where you dig it, and how deep you go. If I dig ten feet down through the top of a hill, I imagine I will not find water. If I dig 50 feet down through a low-lying area that's lush and green, I imagine I will probably find something.
I think that the major point made behind the claims of there being water under 94% percent of the Earth's surface comes from the excuses often meted out by dowsers who fail, that something was "interfering", or that the water is there but too deep, etc etc etc. Or from dowsers who claim a hit when they've found
any water, even if it isn't an amount that you or I would think of as "practical" (i.e., a good well capable of supporting an average household). The "find me a dry spot" was a blithe, sarcastic retort to these kinds of claims.
I realize that you don't like James Randi, but the Million Dollar Challenge isn't about proving him wrong about anything he says. It's about providing testable evidence that paranormal -- or pseudoscientific -- claims have a basis in reality. So you have to be doing something that's paranormal, or pseudoscientific enough to be considered paranormal.
I say the latter because you have
an update on your website about Randi accepting non-paranormal claims. You must understand that these "non-paranormal claims" are actually paranormal. For example, the wine-magnet bit: although the workings of the wine magnet are described in decidedly non-paranormal ways, and are claimed to be perfectly in keeping with the laws of physics, they are not. They are, in fact, so wildly
not in keeping with known electromagnetic theory that they fall into the ream of paranormal despite their claims.
This would apply to you, too, if you were claiming to use some process that flies wildly in the fact of known scientific means & methods and yet still calling it "not paranormal". But your means & methods are not paranormal either (consulting known scientific surveys is not paranormal). So again, it boils down to something like this: "Randi has made some statements about geology that are wrong. I can prove him wrong." Which is fine, but not applicable for the MDC, since that's not what it's about.