Physics and Archaeology 191
Guinnessy writes: "In 1960 Willard Frank Libby won a Nobel Prize for his work on radiocarbon dating, a technique that truly revolutionize archaeology. Now Physics Today magazine has an article describing how new methods are yielding more accurate dates for our prehistoric ancestors, profoundly affecting our understanding of the past. Neat stuff."
Will more accurate carbon dating... (Score:2, Funny)
more accurate... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:more accurate... (Score:1, Troll)
This concept is an idea of my own concoction and doesn't represent anyone else.
Re:more accurate... (Score:3, Insightful)
You want to know why they test older? It is because the world was created mature. The trees already had fruit on them, the animals were full-grown, not babies. In the same manner, oil and coal were in the ground
It would be just as valid to claim the "world was created mature" five minutes ago, with our past memories already in place.
bah! that's silly. (Score:1)
we ALL know it was 3 minutes.
5 minutes... sheesh.
Re:more accurate... (Score:5, Insightful)
More importantly, if you want to argue that the world was created with a perfect history, then it is exactly the same thing as if the world developed over time. If the point of what you said is to defend creationism, then don?t limit yourself to just thinking on such a limited scale of fruits and babies. Consider the fact that if you could know the state of every atom, with its rotation, and basically every piece of energy/non-energy then you can predict the future. Given that, if we assume our big bang theory is correct, if some omnipotent force was able create things as it wanted without limitations, then it could have set the ball in motion for the universe and ultimately us (that includes what we are thinking right now), to be exactly like it wanted from the point of initial expansion. In an isolated system, it would be impossible for the future to deviate, what so ever. This includes setting the constants of the universe so that it allows us the ability to investigate the world around us without limits. And since this omnipotent force was able to foresee the future from the point of initial expansion of the universe, then it falls in quite nicely with the thought that this force still interacts with us today, while it may be just an outcome of the initial conditions.
IMHO, this is the best way for a religion to still claim that their god created the world and universe. While we may figure out that the earth is not the center of the universe like originally defended, I seriously doubt science will be able to disprove an event that occurred before the universe was created. But to explain the fact that our thoughts are just a product of the initial conditions of the universe, would annoy people to say the least, if they really understood it of course.
You seem to hold the idea that something could create the earth (and I assume the universe) in detail, in an instant, yet has a linier existence. Why create something to look 25,000 years old when you can just let unfold in front of you exactly as you want it in the same instant.
Re:more accurate... (Score:3, Insightful)
For a religion with salvation being based on faith in God, I'd be pissed off that God spends all this time and effort trying to fool us into thinking he doesn't exist by doing stuff like planting dinosaur bones in the ground to test our faith.
I'm not too jazzed about burning in hell for all eternity because I was created with a predisposition for doubting what I dont have proof of to begin with, then this dinosaur bone stuff to confuse us even more.
Maybe if God came down from heaven and said "Here I am, believe in Me now." and I *still* didnt believe, that I could understand He wouldnt be happy about. But all this crap about trying to make it look like he doesnt exist then we're punished for all eternity because we believe he doesnt, that's way out-of-line.
-J5K
p.s.- Here's a theological question that's been bothering me for a while, anyone with an answer feel free to chime in.
If Jesus died for our sins and no one believed, would it have been in vain? Would no one be saved after that? Would everyone still be saved? Would it require a second blood-sacrifice, or a third, etc, until people believed?
Re:more accurate... (Score:1)
His was the ultimate, perfect sacrifice - the last sacrifice. A guiltless man paid the price for guilty mankind (think division by zero
No more blood sacrifice is ever required again, so no, a second or a third would not ever happen.
Jesus' sacrifice was it. Finished.
Re:more accurate... (Score:1, Informative)
Re:more accurate... (Score:4, Insightful)
1) You have so-called "Creationists" who not only don't understand how the world was created, but don't *want* to understand. "That is one of God's Mysterys and not in the realm of man". BS. Pure and utter BS. As has been said before, if God gave us curiosity, then he meant for us to use it. These people won't be swayed by *any* proof you show them.
2) Scientific Creationists, of which I am one, believe that God is bound be the same laws of physics that we are. However, his level of technology is much, much, much, greater than ours. That presents us with the same difficulty of your stereotypical caveman trying to understand how a microwave works. We can say "this happened, and we're trying really hard to understand how, but some of this is just going to be over our heads". That isn't willing ignorance, that's humility. In other words, just because scientists a 1000 years ago didn't understand basic principles of flight, doesn't mean birds were violating the Laws of Nature.
Now, as to the subject at hand, accurate dating of rocks. Very few Scientific Creationists (intelligent ones, that is) claim that God waved his hand and the earth sprang in being. Matter (energy) can neither be created nor destroyed. So, when creating the Earth, God used existing materials. Whether they came from this solar system or outside of it, doesn't really matter. It does mean that the rocks can be older than the Earth is. The common example used is "if you use 100 year old bricks to make a new house, is the house new, or 100 years old?"
Anyways, I gotta go to lunch, but I'll follow up later.
Re:more accurate... (Score:3, Interesting)
So who made god?
And if you can accept the fact that he/she always existed, why can't you accept the fact that the universe always existed without him/her?
Re:more accurate... (Score:2)
Re:more accurate... (Score:2)
...you only read half of my statement: i said "[existed forever without god]". i didn't make the connection conditional. and i didn't mention proof, in fact i wasn't even discussing proof. i was focusing on capacity to imagine different scenarios. it's that final leap that always interests me: the godless universe versus the godded universe. i try to get people to explain what it is that makes them choose one over the other.
But until other proof is found, both statements are bunk
i may have misunderstood your first post, are scientific creationists agnostic?
a friend of mine believes that Ra might actually exist, pulling the sun across the sky, but our current scientific methods don't allow us to "prove" his presence.
And what does Chaos Theory have to do with this? There are plenty of arguments that can be made without invoking pop-physics.
Re:more accurate... (Score:2)
I can imagine both scenarios. As an avid reader/watcher of sci-fi, I can imagine *many* different scenarios
Re: both statements are bunk. I meant that without further proof, neither statement can have any meaning beyond interesting conjecture. "bunk" was the wrong word. So no, I'm not agnostic, it just came out that way.
And Chaos Theory has nothing to do with it. My statement was based on an erroneous interpetation of the second law of thermodynamics, which, based on a link from someone else that responded, has been cleared up. If you're interested, check out: http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/thermo/probabilit
See, I have a very open mind about this, and am always willing to learn something new. And, as I'm only human, sometimes I say something wrong
Re:more accurate... (Score:2)
Shall I bother introducing you to the contradiction of an omnipotent God being bound by anything? "What does God need with a starship?"
I think you're just an agnostic who's still in the closet.
Re:more accurate... (Score:2)
One of the *major* problems with discussing religion and science with anybody, is that just saying "I'm a Christian" doesn't come nearly close to defining what I believe. Hence, quite a few responses to my post (including yours) are based on presumptions of beliefs that I don't hold. Unfortunetly, I don't have anyway of dumping my brain into yours so that you know where I'm coming from
Maybe we should both but our hands in a box of crytals and think really hard *grin*.
Re:more accurate... (Score:1)
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If you're wondering why he did it, I'd encourage you to reread Job, or to vastly summarize: Who the fuck are you to question why god does anything. He's god.
If you're saying why did he have to, then you're stuck in a contradiction. If he _HAD_ to do anything, he is no longer omnipotent, and thus you have to rethink your definition of god being omnipotent.
One of the *major* problems with discussing religion and science with anybody, is that just saying "I'm a Christian" doesn't come nearly close to defining what I believe.
Agreed. Just because you're catholic don't mean you think just like the pope, or just cause you're an asshole doesn't mean you think like Jerry Falwell. I'm not trying to attack what you believe. If it makes you happy, knock yourself out. I just found some interesting contradictions in your post and I thought I'd bring them to your attention. One of the interesting ones is the idea of a "Scientific Creationist." You may or may not be one, but the idea by itself is a contradiction. There is no science behind creationism. You could say that S.C.ism is an attempt to describe creationism scientifically, but if you've reached a conclusion (Creationism), then try to work backward with evidence supporting it, you're not working with the scientific method, and any "evidence" you may have is skewed by your bias.
You are granted a _hypothesis_ to work from, but only open mindedly that your evidence may prove or disprove your hypothesis. But if you've concluded that you believe the Creation myth by faith, you've checked your intellectual honesty at the door of these creation related scientific discussions.
Re:Scientific method (Score:1)
The Evolution theory (which I call myth) requires faith, because it has not been proven.
I have no problems with calling either a theory, since neither has been proven. If all scientists were to use the Scientific method (hypothesis, testing of hypothesis, document conclusion) we would actually be able to make progress toward proving/disproving the two conflicting hypothesis. The problem arrises when "Scientists" go about the "Evolution of the Scientific Method"
1) There is no God
2) Begin using original Scientific Method
How odd that using this method, they have not been able to form any real conclusions.
Re:Scientific method (Score:1, Insightful)
As for the "theory of creationism"... My personal view of the Bible's creation story (and I think the view of the modern church) is that it is allegorical. Moreover, I don't think the point of Genesis is to instruct man in the blueprints of the creation of the Universe. To what end? I think the point is to (a) inform us that behind all the phenomena around us (no matter how we envdevour to explain them) lies God's work and (b) that because of that, all his creations (all of the universe, and us in particular as the Bible is addressed to humans) are special.
Re:more accurate... (Score:2)
As for the "Scientific Creationist" part of your post, might I point something out? You are assuming there is no science behind creationism (in fact, you said so). What I believe, and what I really, truly *wish* the other "scientific creationists" believed, is that if we knew for a fact *how* the earth was created, it would not be a case of "God did it", but would instead be "He took material from here, shaped it using these techniques, placed it in orbit around Sol, then used this and...." Do you see what I mean? It's incredibly tough to get across to some people, but not everybody who believes in God believes the same way *grin* Now *that's* a shock.....
Re:more accurate... (Score:2)
That out of the way, maybe I can help with the redefinition. Let's remove the word "God" from the picture for the moment. I believe that a being posessing greater technological power than we currently have (not hard to imagine) created this world using methods that we don't fully understand (simply due to lack of knowledge, not because it is some sort of miracle or magic). That this world did not form spontaneously out of asteroid belts and lightning stricks in chemicals. Let us call that assumption A. Based on A, I have several theories on how and when it happened. But to be perfectly honest, those details aren't important for this discussion. Now, is it possible for this theory to be scientific? Or is it doomed for pseudo-scientific just because I cannot *prove* A? And if it is, then how is that different from the scientist who has never seen a black hole, cannot prove that he has even seen the *effects* of black holes, yet continues to believe in black holes and creates models of how the universe works based on those models? In both cases, they are incredibly powerful forces that we cannot observe
Anyways, you probably won't read this (it's no longer the first or second article!) but it was great having this discussion. I am *so* bloody tired of this turning into "Stupid fundies!" "Atheist pig-dogs!" "Yo' Moma!" and so on.....
Cheers.
Re:more accurate... (Score:2)
To answer your question though, for something to be "scientific" it needs to be proveable or disproveable based on empirical evidence. Black holes are a theory which explains the associated empirical evidence. Hate to break it to you, but your ideas of an alternate version of the creation of life (as opposed to creation of the universe itself), will probably remain pseudo-science for the predictable future. Don't let me tell you it can't be done though, if you think you're right, try to figure out a way to gather evidence and test your hypothesis!
Re:more accurate... (Score:1)
God requires a blood sacrifice for our iniquities. He sent Jesus to pay that price for his chosen people. Since that price is paid, he can no longer extract it from us. This is the glory of Jesus.
God is bound by no law, but he is faithful to his promises. This is often a confusion of people.
Re:more accurate... (Score:1)
Or perhaps a more apt substitution would be "Ra" and "Osiris"?
Or maybe "Frank Sinatra" and "Elvis" - you make the call...
Re:more accurate... (Score:1)
this is often a confusion of people, too.
Re:more accurate... (Score:3, Insightful)
First the scientific...
You suggest that the earth may be younger than the rocks that it is made of. Plate techtonics implies quite the opposite. Any rocks you find on the surface were probably part of the molten mess under the earth's crust at one point. It is possible, I suppose, that some of the earliest pieces of the earths crust may still be around. There could even be a few pieces of material from space that are older than the earth lying around, but most of the material in question has been melted in the earth's furnace before. So you're argument for a younger earth isn't very convincing.
Now for the religious absurdity...
You say you believe that God is bound by the same laws of physics that we are. I don't know of any religion that would agree. If God is bound by the laws of physics, there go all your miracles. Also, when religions claim that God created the universe, they usually claim that the laws of physics are part of that creation, not a set of rules that God had to follow.
Re:more accurate... (Score:1)
OK. Here's one: Mormonism. While many mormons may not agree, there are many that would. As for the official doctrines of the church they do not say one way or another, but do invite the possiblity in various ways.
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To expand a little bit on what GeekBoy said, yes, we believe the ultimate purpose of existence is to create (hence the large families
Btw, what I just said *is*, afaik, official LDS doctrine, however, if it isn't, then it's *my* fault, and not the church's.
This is drifting off topic, oh well......
Re:more accurate... (Score:1)
Although I think the original poster was a little off... the fact is, earth IS made up of material that is a lot older than earth it self. Matter does not just create it self... it comes from somewhere. Of course, I do not think there would be any way of actually dating say.. magma. (What a hot date that would be... hehehehehe)
If God is bound by the laws of physics, there go all your miracles.
Bzzzzt! Wrong. You must consider the fact that technology beond your time is indistinguishable from magic or in this case, miracles. Show a caveman a lighter, and you will be treated as god.
Re:more accurate... (Score:1)
However, we say that if there are billions and billions of stars and even more planets and an infinite number of universes, it becomes increasingly likely that somewhere the environment would be correct for life to exist, and, we must be that somewhere since life exists here on Earth.
As a Christian and someone who is interested in science, I believe that God normally does use the physical laws (which are of his creation) to bring about many of the miracles that are documented in the Bible. For example, why couldn't God have used wind to part the waters, or why couldn't God have used a meteorite to destroy Sodom and Gamorrah? Those events occurring are highly unlikely but not completely unlikely. Does that mean God wasn't the utilizing nature as his instrument? Not at all. God does transcend physical law and can do whatever he pleases but that doesn't mean that he doesn't choose to abide by them.
Re:more accurate... (Score:1)
your may not be as objective as you want to believe...
Re:more accurate... (Score:2)
See the Talk Origins [talkorigins.org] web site....
Re:more accurate... (Score:2)
Re:more accurate... (Score:2, Funny)
>Anyways, I gotta go to lunch, but I'll follow up later.
I have discovered a truly remarkable proof of Creationism, which this margin is too small to contain.
Re:more accurate... (Score:2)
Does this mean that in several hundred years, a descendenat of Andrew Wiles will prove Creationism true?
Re:more accurate... (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, if you're honestly trying to understand evidence (scientific evidence, that is) that's being presented to you, that's one thing, but I know a lot of people that are willingly ignorant.
Anyway, it's well and good to say at times "I don't understand this." It's quite another to start bringing "God" into the debate because "there's no other possible explanation."
What I really don't get is why so many religious folks can't see that their "holy scripture" has no more solid evidence for it being The Truth than the tales of Zeus and Thor that they just naturally assume are just silly old stories. If it's so easy to pass off Zeus turning into a bull as just a story, why is it so hard to accept Jesus walking on water as just a story? Could it be the social context of the believer....? Hmmmm?
Re:more accurate... (Score:2)
Man, you have no idea how much that pisses me off. God gave you a brain, use it!! Don't tiptoe around ideas, just because they challenge your faith. Either it's true, or it's not. If it is true, then someone coming up with a different theory isn't going to somehow reverse it. People who refuse to learn or read strike me as being fundamentally unfaithful. I.e., their faith is so small, they cannot stand to have it challenged. Deliberate ignorance is maddening.
Oh, look, that's a soapbox I'm standing on
Please note this rant isn't aimed at you (dR.fuZZo), but at those supposedly "religous" fundies that... Ahh, I was just going to go off on another rant. I better end this post here
Re:more accurate... (Score:3, Insightful)
You sound like somebody who really wants rigority and logic in formulating your worldview, but would not take the final step of embracing the scientific method.
Because, according to the scientific method, the jury is still out about the existence of a creator/first cause.
I just learned recently that this form of philosophy makes you a "gnostic theist". Nothing wrong with that, of course.
Theistic evolution... (Score:1)
You left out us theistic evolutionists. The basic premise being that the chance of this universe springing into existence via some random quantum fluctuations is infinitesimally small, and 99.9999% of mutations are fatal or disadvantageus to the organism. For this level of evolution to have happened in the given (scientific) age of the Earth, it must have had help.
The real bottom line is, the theory of evolution is sound, but unprovable. The theory of creation is also unprovable. Theistic evolution is also unprovable.
Some things will always remain theories.
Re:Theistic evolution... (Score:1)
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Lyrics and melody © 1994 by Catherine Faber
From desert cliff and mountaintop we trace the wide design,
Strike-slip fault and overthrust and syn and anticline. . .
We gaze upon creation where erosion makes it known,
And count the countless aeons in the banding of the stone.
Odd, long-vanished creatures and their tracks & shells are found;
Where truth has left its sketches on the slate below the ground.
The patient stone can speak, if we but listen when it talks.
Humans wrote the Bible; God wrote the rocks.
Other Beliefs (Score:2)
3) Agnostics that find the debate amusing and feed the trolls on both sides, happy to spout off whatever keeps the thread growing.
4) Proponents of the 'Intelligent Design' theory, who roughly propose that God (or someone) was the initial force or energy behind the 'Big-Bang' some 15 or so billion years ago and guided the outcome including the details of life on this planet.
Re:more accurate... (Score:2)
There are still large numbers of people that believe in an out of nothing creation. Likewise there are significant numbers that believe that God established the universe and physical laws so it would all evolve just how He wanted from the big bang forward. This is however the first time I've heard a westerner profess that there are physical things and physical laws outside of God that God is not responsible for and can not change. (For the record this belief has been a part of some Hindu philosophies for millenia. No, I'm not Hindu.)
The real question then is what is God's place in the universe? If He is entirely bound by the known physical laws then you run into the problem of how does God interact with universe? If God has no physical presence, then he can not interact with physical objects while obeying physical laws. This is a form of the no causal break argument, if all events in the universe can be explained entirely on the basis of physical laws then there is no evidence for supposing the existence of a God existing outside the bounds of the universe. Of course, most people say God makes miracles by shoving physical laws aside and accomplishing what He wishes, but that would invalidate your position it would seem.
On the other hand you might argue that God interacts with the physical world solely by possessing physical form. Perhaps by being born into a mortal body or some other means, and then using that physical form to accomplish his will in a way that strictly adheres to physical law. Of course, I think most people (though perhaps not Mormons) would be very uncomfortable with the idea that every act of God could be replicated by man possessing the right knowledge and technology. Besides this just transfers the no causal break problem unto the issue of establishing the nature and existence of God's or any other soul. If God does exist in physical form then I would challenge you to point Him out, unless of course you believe He is no longer active in this world.
For my part I am much more comfortable acting on faith that God created physical laws for the benefit of the universe, but that He can push them asunder if need be. If I have misinterpreted your position, I apologize.
Dating Technique (Score:1, Funny)
At 4.1 billion years, the halflife of 40Ar is ideal for dating ancient humans.
OK...if you're into that sort of thing.
I prefer 'em a little younger, though.
Re:Dating Technique (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Dating Technique (Score:2)
Question 1:
How old ARe you? 40? _______
</40Ar test>
I swear your honor, she said she was 18...
Re:Dating Technique (Score:1)
</joke>
You are incorrect, my friend. (Score:2, Informative)
potassium-argon dating
Potassium-argon dating is used to determine the age of igneous rocks based on the ratio of an unstable isotope of potassium to that of argon. Potassium is a comon element found in many minerals. The isotopic distribution of potassium on the earth is approximately 93% 39K and 7% 41K. Since these values are only approximate, the total percent abundance of these two isotopes is not 100%, but 99.9883%. The remaining 0.0117% is 40K -- an unstable isotope with a half life of 1.26 x 10^9 years. 40K has three decay modes: beta decay, positron emission, and electron capture.
1.26*10^9 = 1.26 BILLION. On a logarithmic basis, the article is much closer than you.
Sometimes the oldest methods.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Before the radio-carbon dating and the physics of glow curves and AMS testing and all the other modern techniques were available, archaeologists were digging in the dirt looking for "old-stuff" to examine. It's a natural human behaviour, a curiousity to know where we came from.
So what did people use in the old days? Their eyes and their brains. Observations and an understanding of basic anatomy, history and geology are tools that you can take anywhere, don't require an expensive lab, and never need new batteries.
Today's technology may be nailing down more accurate dating, but human experience out in the field is still you're best place to start in an archaeological dig. While the two should compliment each other, the people who rely on machines to do all the work for them don't really understand what it means to be an archaeologist.
Re:Sometimes the oldest methods.... (Score:1)
Re:Sometimes the oldest methods.... (Score:2, Informative)
My field work has suggested to me that "what it means to be an archaeologist" is basically sitting around and spouting lots of complex scenerios from rather trivial amounts of data. Whoever pushes the grandest vision gets the biggest funding and that's what determines our view of reality. I thought about going into the field at one time but was quickly discouraged. While it's an interesting (and useful) mental exercise to sit around and think up these scenerios, I think the amount of real hard knowledge that we derive from them is essentially meaningless. Fact is, pretty much all of what we know comes from written records. The rest, we owe mostly to the harder sciences (carbon dating, genetic analysis, etc). And the speculation, well, that's not so easy to test...
Devon
Re:Sometimes the oldest methods.... (Score:2)
But this does not give you real dates, so you cannot compare the ages of sites left by different, non-interacting cultures. The technological level alone does not limit the possibilities much -- stone axes are probably still in use today in New Guinea.
The only way you get real dates is when they start leaving written records. E.g., Egyptian civilizations are datable because they etched-in-stone a nearly continuous record of the years from their first cities up through Roman times, and the Roman Catholic church has kept a reasonably accurate tally of the years since. Mesopotamian civilizations would keep records for a while, but then collapse leaving gaps of unknown length, but because they interacted with Egypt you can often associate the date. But if you want to figure out when some European hunter lived, without radio-dating your only chance is to find some definite link (same kind of clothes, pottery, or equipment) as was used by people that interacted with one of the record-keeping civilizations. (The illiterate barbarian tribes really are important to history even though they don't write any -- they keep overruning civilizations grown too soft or too complacent.)
Setup for another movie... (Score:2, Funny)
Why this is important. (Score:4, Informative)
What's left to consider are the reprocussions from this kind of discovery. It's important to remember that all of human social sciences... language, philosiphy, psychology... all of them will benifit dramatically from knowing not only the exact time of origin of the human species, but early human's movement patterns.
One of the problems about human history that this kind of dating will help solve is the origin of human language. When did humans learn to speak? What languages descended from which? Why do many 'fairy tales' appear in more than one culture? Was there a single human 'parent' language that was responsible for this?
This kind of 'early' human history dating will help us probe out these kind of conundrums.
Re:Why this is important. (Score:2)
anthropology (Score:4, Interesting)
Carbon dating is a wonderful technology - it dates stuff within a range of a century or so. It enables us to confirm hypothesis made by other methods.
A more rigid and absolute dating technology would probably enable archaeologists to fill in many of the gaps in current knowledge.
I worry about too much reliance on an absolute technology, though. Even if you take a bore of soil and can tell the exact day when each item fell into it, you still learn nothing about trade routes, cultures, mythologies, ancient lifestyles, etc.
This is where anthropology, an inexact science, must take the lead.
Re:anthropology (Score:2)
Before I went into pharma, I seriously thought about going into archaeology, and taking some anthropology classes to boost my skills. (instead, I took geochemistry, and went into drugs... go figure).
Re:anthropology (Score:2)
Re:anthropology (Score:1)
You might be surprised, as well, by how exact a science anthropology can be. In many cases, written works up to 1500 years old have been more accurately dated, and with a smaller range of uncertainty, through handwriting analysis.
Re:anthropology [induction vs. deduction] (Score:2)
I worry about too much reliance on an absolute technology, though. Even if you take a bore of soil and can tell the exact day when each item fell into it, you still learn nothing about trade routes, cultures, mythologies, ancient lifestyles, etc.
This only becomes a worry if you are still working on the inductive approach. When you have accurate enough data in large enough quantities, you can use a deductive approach to generate your theories from the data itself. In the presences of such data, this can be very effective. You can take that soil, find when every item fell into it, and use that to guess at trade routes, rather than guessing at trade routes and then using the bore to see if you were right.
Just because we developed archaeology without carbon dating and then used carbon dating to verify the theories of previous archaeological work doesn't mean that's the best way to do it. Just because it's a different approach doesn't mean it's any worse then then "anthropological" approach. The best results will surely come of combining anthropology and technology (and, more than likely, deduction and induction), but the order in which they are applied may shift. Times change, technologies change, and sometimes we have to change our ways of thinking in order to keep on doing better.
Just a thought.
-Puk
Dating Accuracy (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Dating Accuracy (Score:5, Insightful)
No one has ever bred a new species artificially--and both plant and animal breeders have been trying for hundreds of years, as have scientists.
I've heard this one before too. And it's wrong. Way wrong. There are several observed instances of speciation (especially in the world of botany). A good easy read to start with can be found at the Talk.origins Speciation Faq [talkorigins.org] if you're interested in the background and some references to real papers on the issue. I'm sorry, but any book published after 1915 or so that claims that scientists and plant breeders have never been able to come up with new species is blatantly ignoring established facts and probably not worth your time.
Re:Dating Accuracy (Score:2)
Re:Dating Accuracy (Score:2)
Re:Dating Accuracy (Score:2)
There are still critical assumptions that have yet to be proven right.
Actually, these aren't assumptions, they're theories. Inevitably, all our knowledge of the distant past is going to depend on theories and conjectures. The radioisotope method of dating has been endorsed by a Nobel Prize, which certainly does not prove it but lends assurance to laymen that it has some plausibility.
Until someone comes up with evidence from some more reliable technique that contradicts radioisotope dating, it makes sense to use it to enhance our picture of the past.
Certainty is not one of the things that theories can guarantee. Ultimately, all you can say is that radioisotope dating is consistent with other things we know about the past. In the absence of direct observation, consistency may be as close as we can come to the truth.
Re:Dating Accuracy (Score:1)
There are ways [talkorigins.org] to get better answers.
Re:Dating Accuracy (Score:5, Informative)
isotopic data to see if the extraneous Ar is there and we can look at the minerals and the geologic context of the sample and assess the likelihood of it. But unless we do those things throughly, we can misinterpret the isotopic data and thus the age of the sample. The isotopes don't lie, but we can be fooled.
Re:Dating Accuracy (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem with books like "Shattering the Myths of Darwinism", is that there exists no "Darwinism" as these books wants you to believe. There do exist a very valuable work by Darwin, and there exist many scientists who believe Darwin was mostly right. These scientist engaged and are still engaged in discussions with scientists who do not agree with their view -- both on details and on the more fundamental views (but no real scientist is going to tell you they can prove God's existence or other metaphysical /religious matters). This is what science is all about.
But books like these want you to think there is some sort of conspiracy, or that science have been high-jacked by the (evil) "Darwinist". Creationists attack each evidence for Darwin's theories and end up by saying, "see, again there is reason for doubt -- the Darwinists views are built on an illusion." The problem is, all these methods were not developed to prove Darwin is right. The physics behind carbon dating was not developed with Darwin in mind, but then some smart guy finds out, "these methods can give us answers also in archeology!". Any new method will be compared with estimate from previous methods, and any new method (new radioactive isotopes for instant) will have the potential to invalid older methods (and conclusions built upon them) and make scientist re-evaluate what is the most thrust wordy theory.
When two methods estimates don't compare -- one or both is wrong (or interpreted wrong) -- and scientist in the field will be all fired up to unravel the mystery and to win that Nobel prize. The greatest mistake is to believe scientist in general are disappointed to find out the accept theories are no good -- this only gives them the opportunity for making a new theory that will make them famous (yeah!) and also extend human knowledge (you are a researcher, and this is your goal). A "scientific theory" that God created the Universe in 7 days, is hard to "prove" but more importantly, not very interesting. (An all mighty God could have created the Universe one second ago with me and all my memories with it, but so what?) Metaphysics is best left to the philosophers.
To discuss more details; yes, physicist and geologist do know about experimental errors or experimental limitations. Two orders of magnitude is large, but is sometimes acceptable, but only as long as one are aware of the accuracy of a measurement/method. One can not invalid the usefulness of radioactive dating in a field just because the method is uncertain. The interpretation of the result is also depended on other theories like the Carbon-14 in the atmosphere ages ago. But then, some smart guy drills a hole in the ice of Greenland, and one has a new method to test these theories. And when this method fits with older theories, we believe more in them. But who knows, maybe we will get another way to find out the C14 in the atmosphere millions of year ago, that will show the theories of today are wrong. But it will be a very strange scientist who thinks this is a bad thing.
I do not mind books attacking leading scientific ideas; many of those books are science books. But be aware of books/authors that want to convince you of something, but do not want to tell the whole story. I have not read this book, but any book that builds on the myth of "Darwinism", should be approached at least as critical as those theories we at the moment accept as the most scientific reasonble....
Re:Dating Accuracy (Score:3, Insightful)
It discusses in scientific detail what is wrong with the radioactive dating methods
The Creationists like to point out so-called "flaws" in dating techniques that are based on "assumptions." While they can sometimes confuse the scientifically illiterate with this terminology, there is now a dating technique that doesn't rely on knowledge of radioisotopes that is very effective in showing the foolishness of their arguments.
Dendrochronology [shef.ac.uk] is the science of dating by the use of annular tree rings. Nothing too confusing here, it's school kid stuff. However, by piecing together the "fingerprint" of a sequence of years, we can put overlapping material from live trees and trees used in construction or preserved in peat bogs, etc. to create a calendar of the past 9000 years [sonic.net], well beyond the Creationist "age of the earth."
AMS facilities (Score:3, Interesting)
Our lab here at Purdue, PRIME Lab [purdue.edu], is a great example of this, retooling an older tandem accelerator lab for a new use as funding for nuclear physics began to dry up, and other similar facilities around the country closed. We've even got one of the accelerators with the highest energies of any AMS facility in the US by reusing the facility in this way.
Perhaps (Score:1, Funny)
Um.... (Score:5, Interesting)
==> Traditional archaeology has not been a field that suffers science easily. Only gradually have archaeologists accepted physics as a tool for archaeological research. Perhaps as a result, the physicists who work in archaeology, their methods, and their theories, are neither well known nor numerous. Archaeometry, as the wider field of scientific archaeology is known, has no Heisenbergs or Einsteins, uncertainty principles or relativity theories. The only physical discovery to truly revolutionize archaeology has been radiocarbon dating.
Physicists have developped ground-based RADAR technology and Echo-location technologies which are having a profound impact on the archaeological world.
Take a look at: http://www.exn.ca/inc/demo.asp?Video=exn20011009-
(Windows media player format, sorry.)
These RADAR/SONAR devices have drastically reduced the time it takes to locate archaeological sites, and yet they don't even mention it until the end of the article. After having clearly stated that "The only physical discovery to truly revolutionize archaeology has been radiocarbon dating."
Re:Um.... (Score:2)
These RADAR/SONAR devices have drastically reduced the time it takes to locate archaeological sites, and yet they don't even mention it until the end of the article. After having clearly stated that "The only physical discovery to truly revolutionize archaeology has been radiocarbon dating."
They also leave out potassium-argon dating, fluorine dating, electron spin resonance dating, uranium-thorium dating, fission track dating and several more.
Re:Um.... (Score:2)
I think you misunderstand (Score:1)
Assumptions (Score:1)
What if it hasn't stayed constant? What if it's on an exponential rate itself? What if it decayed at a slower/faster rate 1 million years ago? What if an asteroid collision (or some other massive geological event) caused a limited duration decay acceleration?
The list can go on and on.
Re:Assumptions (Score:1, Informative)
> What if it decayed at a slower/faster rate
> 1 million years ago?
I suspect that couldn't happen unless the balance between the strong and weak forces changed. And if that balance did change, the results would be far more catastrophic than a mere asteroid collision.
Imagine entire galaxies unravelling into bundles of plasma - or switching off like a light switch.
No, I don't see that assumption as a major problem.
Re:Assumptions (Score:1)
If you're going to say that decay rates may have been different in the past, it is up to you to at least come up with data to show why anyone should accept this, and you need to devise a theory to explain why decay rates have change (and hence show where current theories are wrong).
Re:Assumptions (Score:2)
Well, I'd be willing to say that the lights turn on now-a-days much faster than they did 100 years ago.. does this affect isotope dating?
--
Relax, it's a joke. Have a good friday!
Archaeology and Modern Technology (Score:3, Funny)
carbon 14 dating and tree rings (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:carbon 14 dating and tree rings (Score:1, Informative)
Re:carbon 14 dating and tree rings (Score:2)
Thanks for the clarification. I knew it had something to do with some rate changing :-)
Carbon dating is only accurate to 5000 years (Score:2)
-Ted
PS: What cites? You know where to find them [google.com]
Update: Willard Libby designed C-14 Dating (Score:2)
-Ted
got it all wrong (Score:2, Funny)
hee hee.
silly bible.
The problem with carbon dating... (Score:2, Informative)
When you are talking about artifacts millions of years old, there is no "proof" of the age of any item.
Some scientists put together a theory of how carbon acts over millions of years (and obviously because of the timeframe involved have no empiracle evidence about the behavior of carbon over millions of years) Then they date things relative to the theory.
Note I am not saying carbon dating is wrong, but it certainly hasn't been proven.
Re:The problem with carbon dating... (Score:1, Informative)
anything over ca. 60kyr to 100kyr old. No million year stuff. You use 40Ar/39Ar and other techniques for that. As for the systematics of C over time, the things we need to know and assume are: a) production rates of 14C over time which we get a very detailed record from tree rings, etc. (b) we assume that living organisms are in radiometic equilibrium with the atmospheric reverviour of 14C, which is reasonable, and (c) we assume that after death the organismn no is no longer in equilibruim (i.e. uptake rate does not equal decay rate). After that, we just need to rely on decay and our abiltiy to measure small numbers of atoms precisely (hence ams techniques). But I must reiterate taht without good field work the best numbers you can get are pretty meaningless.
discover old stuff good (Score:1)
doing nothing for the english language, which is still in caveman speak...
Pyramids (Score:3, Interesting)
When were the oldest pyramids in Egypt built - really?
I saw a special on Discovery a year ago, and they said that carbon dating was estimating the pyramids to be (IIRC) between 4 and 11 thousand years old. Not too accurate, is it? Can someone explain, why there is so much doubt when estimating the age of pyramids, when they could set the age of the Egyptian pharaoh's tomb to 5730 years? And have any of these new techniques set some more accurate dates?
OT: Pyramid Information (Score:2)
-Ted
Java Man and the Lisp Gnu (Score:2)
Resonant Nuclear Reaction Analysis (Score:1)
One up and coming way of dating fossils uses a technique called Nuclear Reaction Analysis (NRA). You bombard a substance (in this case flint) with ions, which penetrate the sample and react with fluoride when they're at a certain depth/energy. The theory is, fluoride has only been in water since a certain time in our past, so based on how deep the fluorine is inside the sample, you know how old it is.
Check out here [unt.edu]
Re:Invalid Form Key (Score:1)