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originally posted by: JohnnyCanuck
a reply to: peter vlar
Kudos, Dude, for turning it into a teachable moment.
I think it's fair to say that all of us start at the fringes but it's a desire for proofs that helps some of us to focus our interests...while retaining our imaginations. That's where science and innovation come from!
originally posted by: Harte
originally posted by: reletomp
originally posted by: Harte
originally posted by: 8675309jenny
Since fossils are mineralized, is it not possible that the carbon dating is actually measuring the age of carbon that became part of the fossil MANY MANY years after the animal died ?
Carbon dating cannot be, and never is, used on fossils.
Carbon dating is only useful for organic materials dating no further back than around 60,000 years before present.
Harte
exactly wise guy, like on fossils of bones dating less than 5 thousands years old, like the dinosours'
Carbon dating was not used on this fossil, not-wise guy.
Harte
originally posted by: hydeman11
a
As has been said multiple times, C-14 is not useful past 60,000 years, at best.
There is no way that any analysis using C-14 would indicate an age of a "few hundred t(h)ousand years" as you suggest, because that goes beyond the limits of the material.