Petrified Wood In Days, Not Millions Of Years 76
prostoalex writes "Any petrified wood enthusiast would tell you that a quality product takes millions of years to mature, following Mother Nature's course, which, of course, is very frustrating for anyone experimenting. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory now managed to get the process in few days, USA Today says. The scientific achievement will be beneficial for "separating industrial chemicals, filtering pollutants and soaking up contamination"."
Natalie Portman (Score:3, Funny)
You might expect to get your rocks off... (Score:2)
"The relationship was rocky. She was a hard woman, but loved to be pored."
It does lend new meaning to the (search) phrase "stoned chick".
Re:Natalie Portman (Score:2)
Carbon Dating (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Carbon Dating (Score:5, Interesting)
It would be cool though, if you could accellerate radioactive decay that easilly. You could just blast your nuclear waste with it and not have to store any more nuclear waste far underground.
Re:Carbon Dating (OT) (Score:2)
Re:Carbon Dating (OT) (Score:1)
Re:Carbon Dating (OT) (Score:2)
There would be hell of a lot less nuclear "waste" if they only reprocessed it. I think only 1% or so of uranium is "burned" (decays) in nuclear reactor. A nuclear reactor only generates a few pounds of actual waste per year.
Re:Carbon Dating (Score:3, Informative)
If you want more on the specifics of carbon dating, check the Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_dating
As far as accelerating radioactive decay, there is some interesting research out there about bombarding fission products with accelerated
Re:Carbon Dating (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Carbon Dating (Score:1)
Re:Carbon Dating (Score:3, Informative)
No need for that. Just grab some mined coal. That stuff has been underground for a number of million years and has no C-14 left in it.
From the posts here, I guess it's not so well-known, but radiocarbon dating is pretty much useless for the modern era for exactly this reason: We've been burning so many fossil fuels that we've screwed up the natural ratio of carbon isotopes in the atmosphere.
That's not strictly true (Score:2)
However, you don't need to change the half-life of C14 to radically alter the numbers you get out of C-ratio dating. AMS dating did it all in one hit by simply counting the atoms correctly, 4eg, and any one of a dozen known natural processes (to say nothing of the preparation samples go through before analysis) can also alter the ratios on the fly.
Re:That's not strictly true (Score:1)
I think that was the gist of the research that I have read. Sorry, but I couldn't find a citing.
I concede transmutation shortens half-lives... (Score:2)
Re:That's not strictly true (Score:1)
Due to their differing masses, C12 and C14 behave slightly differently in chemical reactions. This can be enough to cause natural fractionation of various kinds.
Thereby giving believers in young-earth creation a valid excuse to doubt radiocarbon dating results.
It's not as if there's a shortage of same (-: (Score:2)
Faking Carbon Dating (Score:2, Informative)
It can be a chemical process too, instead of a nuclear one, if you set it up right.
You just need to get the desired ration of C-14 into the food chain. With mice you can feed them on yeast or algae pills made, at least partially, in an artificial environment. With a pine tree however, you'd have to operate a sealed 20m - 30m tall environmental chamber for 30 to 40 ye
Re:Carbon Dating (Score:2, Insightful)
That doesn't seem to have stopped people. (Score:2)
Re:That doesn't seem to have stopped people. (Score:2)
Or, of course, it wasn't actually wood. Or whatever it was had modern contamination. You can look it up here. [gondwanaresearch.com]
Unfortunately for Gondwana Research... (Score:2)
That puts a ceiling on the phenomenon of maybe tens of thousands of years, possibly at a stretch hundreds of thousands. Unfortunately, orthodox geography will not admit to a landscape changing that fast.
Noah survived it (Score:1)
Unfortunately, orthodox geography will not admit to a landscape changing that fast.
Yes it does. The Orthodox Church and other Christian organizations have endorsed a belief that the earthquakes that triggered the Great Flood of 1656 (after creation) changed the landscape and the environment to the point of unrecognizability.
Yes, but that's Orthodox geology, not... (Score:2)
It turns out that his boat is just the right size (550 feet long) to ride out tsunami-sized waves. Any longer, she'd break; any shorter, she'd tip. Evidently somebody knew a lot about nautical engineering. It seems that the bilges were even self-pumped by the wave motion. Leonardo couldn't have done better.
Re:Carbon Dating (Score:2)
The whole wood and fossils thing, and carbon dating, I think carbon dating is wierd. Isn't there old aged carbon just floating around everywhere? How does it stay yound and fresh, so when it gets trapped it gets all old?
What life did it start at to measure its half life (i.e. you know the rate of decay, but you don't KNOW the start point? the element, it might
Re:Carbon Dating (Score:2)
Call me a cynic. (Score:2)
I'm responding to an AC! (Score:3, Informative)
2. More contemporary versions accurately use the pronoun 'they' where you've quoted 'he.'
3. In the KJV, if it really meant God, it would have said He, not he.
But you a) don't care, and b) just wanted to sound smart, didn't you?
For future reference, the Bible can be found on line in many translations, searchable at http://bible.gospelcom.net/ [gospelcom.net]
Re:I'm responding to an AC! (Score:2)
Great... (Score:1, Funny)
IgNoble (Score:2)
Did I read that right? (Score:2)
Wait, let me get this straight... (Score:4, Funny)
A what now? Those exist?!
Re:Wait, let me get this straight... (Score:1)
Re:Wait, let me get this straight... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Wait, let me get this straight... (Score:2)
Tiger's eye and Bird's eye both come from a particular type of diseased maple trees. The difference between Tiger's and Bird's eye is whether wood is cut across the grain, or with the grain. (Across giving Bird's eye, with giving Tiger's eye)
Re:Wait, let me get this straight... (Score:2)
Re:Wait, let me get this straight... (Score:1)
Tiger eye is a form of quartz, pseudomorphous after asbestos (crocidolite in Tiger's eye, riebeickite in the case of Falcon's eye) It it the partially replaced asbestos fibres which give the woodlike sheen. Could probably find a reference at http:\\mindat.org if I wasn't feeling so lazy.
Re:Wait, let me get this straight... (Score:2)
And if its a quartz, why is it so soft?
--
Cheers, Gene
Re:Wait, let me get this straight... (Score:1)
Also of possible utility is www.rockhounds.com
On topic though, petrified wood can look very similar to Tiger's eye if the grain is well preserved (I have some stashed away in my collection somewhere like this to work on when I retire). Also: petrified wood can be found in various stages of replacement, I've seen some that could probably be turned on a lathe successfully. The replacement mineral in petrified wood can be varied:
Totally OT to Gene (Score:2)
Re:Totally OT to Gene (Score:2)
Don't you guys even check Google? (Score:2)
"Tiger's Eye" "Bird's Eye" diseased maple -- no match
"Tiger's Eye" "Bird's Eye" maple -- plenty of matches, here's a good image of Bird's Eye maple [oldtowneureka.com] (with a reference to Tiger's Eye). Most of the Tiger's Eye examples seem to be in guitars or hi-fi consoles, but there's a reference to a cruise ship with a "tiger's eye maple" table (at playboy.com). There's a barrette for sale [blueheronwoods.com], but the Tiger's Eye in it is the stone, not the wood.
Lots of references to Tiger's Eye stone, but the only references to it and pe
Yes, Deirdrie, they do. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Wait, let me get this straight... (Score:1)
Look Buddy (Score:4, Funny)
Frigging diamond cartels! I wanna cut some glass!
Re:Look Buddy (Score:2)
Oh, wait... You want that all in one piece?
Re:Look Buddy (Score:1, Informative)
There are people working very hard on this. I think the show Nova did [pbs.org] on creating diamond synthetics is one of their best.
DeBeers [rotten.com] purposely hoardes diamonds to keep the price up ala OPEC. In fact, none of their executives can step foot inside the US as they would likely be arrested.
Sadly, the Bush administration may let them off [buzzle.com] the hook on this.
Only if there is honest and real competition in the diamond market (even with the synthetics)
Once the patents expire, watch the sparks fly. (Score:2)
Only if there is honest and real competition in the diamond market (even with the synthetics) will you see $5/carat diamonds As it stands now, many of the synthetics seem to cost as much as the real.
As the patents on diamond manufacture start to run out in the 2020s, trust me that the bottom will fall out of the diamond market. Or do you claim that De Beers will hire Cher as the spokeswoman for a proposed patent term extension act [kuro5hin.org]?
At Last! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:At Last! (Score:3, Funny)
It's LOG!
"What rolls down stairs
and over the chairs
and into your neighbor's dog?
It fits on your back,
It's good for a snack,
Everyone knows it's log.
It's log, it's log,
It's big, it's heavy, it's wood.
It's log, it's log, it's better than bad, it's good."
Full Text (Score:3, Informative)
I love that you can always find the USA today equivalent on slashdot, but never anything more in depth, doesnt this site cater to nerds?
Re:Full Text (Score:2)
Re:Full Text (Score:1)
Full Text in Advanced Materials
From the page you linked:
Re:Full Text (Score:1)
The REAL Extreme Home Makeover (Score:1)
And would it be better to petrify the logs, then build the cabin, or build the cabin and then petrify it? Just slip a hug baggie over it, pump it full of gas...
Another use for Viagra (Score:1)
"Any petrified wood enthusiast would tell you that (Score:1)
OK, OK - obligatory posting (Score:2)
Correct me if I'm wrong... (Score:1)
Re:Correct me if I'm wrong... (Score:2)
By the way, this means that most or all of petrified wood comes from a catastrophe, not from the "normal" course of events.
Think again (Score:2)
No, it doesn't. There's a broad gulph between catastrophic and rapidly occuring events. Landslides for instance are quite fast enough to bury trees and preserve then. So are volcanic eruptions. As are floods and tsunamis. Some of those events may be considered "catastrophes" on a human scale, but they are ALL perfectly normal geological processes. Some, such as floods are more o
Two problems (Score:2)
Typical replacement minerals are agate and opal, minerals that can be transported and deposited by cold water. However, there are areas
Re:Two problems - update (Score:2)
Does it preserve most of the carbon it had? (Score:1)