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[_ Old Earth _] Young Earth Science

Ashua said:
.... 4. One part of the Vollosovitch mammoth carbon dated at 29,500 years old and another part at 44,000. (Troy L. Pewe, Quarternary Stratigraphic Nomenclature in Unglaciated Central Alaska, Geological Survey Professional Paper 862, p. 30).
5. One part of Dima, a baby frozen mammoth, was 40,000, another part was 26,000 and the wood immediately around the carcass was 9-10,000 years old†(Troy L. Pewe, Quarternary Stratigraphic Nomenclature in Unglaciated Central Alaska, Geological Survey Professional Paper 862, p. 30).
6. The lower leg of the Fairbanks Creek mammoth had a radiocarbon age of 15,380 RCY (Radio Carbon Years), while its skin and flesh were 21,300 RCY. (Harold E. Anthony, Natures Deep Freeze. Natural History, Sept. 1949, p. 300).
7. The two Colorado Creek, AK Mammoths had radiocarbon ages of 22,850 and 16,150 respectively. (Robert M. Thorson and R. Dale Guthrie, Stratigraphy of the Colorado Creek Mammoth Locality, Alaska. Quaternary Research, vol. 37, no. 2, March 1992, pp. 214-228).
And let me point out that whatever sources you derived these claims from are being equally disingenuous, although I suspect they all come from the same place:

Karen E. Bartelt examined the Vollosovitch mammoth claim closely and determined that, as described above, the assertions are little more than either deliberate misrepresentation or (less likely) a complete inability to read the relevant paper for comprehension:

Hovind makes a big-time misrepresentation here. I looked at the data in USGS Professional Paper 862. It is a 1975 paper by Troy Pewe entitled “Quaternary Stratigraphic Nomenclature in Unglaciated Central Alaskaâ€. It is a description of stratigraphic units in Alaska, but does contain more than 150 radiocarbon dates. Many of these dates are from the 1950’s and 60’s. There are three references to mammoths: hair from a mammoth skull (found by Geist in 1951 in frozen silt); “flesh from lower leg, Mammuthus primigenius†(found by Osborne in 1940, 26 m below the surface); and the “skin and flesh of Mammuthus primigenius[â€] [baby mammoth] (found by Geist in 1948 “with a beaver damâ€). The dates given are, respectively, 32,700; 15,380; and 21,300 years BP BUT the last is thought to be an invalid date because the hide was soaked in glycerin.

NOWHERE IN THE PAPER DOES IT SAY, OR EVEN IMPLY, THAT THESE SPECIMENS ARE PARTS OF THE SAME ANIMAL. They were found in different places, at different times, by different people. One is even termed “babyâ€, and the other is not. To construct this Fractured Fairy Tale, Hovind must have hoped that no one listening would check and see what his reference really said.


Source: http://members.cox.net/ardipithecus/evo ... ie001.html

As far as Dima is concerned, you have quoted Hovind's version of Pewe's comment almost verbatim, so I imagine that is your source. The source quoted above indicates that this sentence does not occur in the referred to paper by Pewe. Furthermore, in 1993 V.V. Ukraintseva reviewed the Dima findings and reported three C14 dates for the animal (all to around 40,000 years ago) and that dates for the surrounding deposits are consistent with these.

Source: http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CD/CD011_2.html

The report concerning the Fairbanks' mammoth also attempts to mislead you by conflating different data as if it referred to the same animal. I am also puzzled that a 1949 source would be referred to as an accurate source for radiocarbon dating as it was only in this year that Willard Libby and his team announced the first radiocarbon dates. That aside, however, this claim has also been refuted by Dr Bartelt:

In professional paper 862 I found those Fairbanks Creek mammoth dates. These two dates were mentioned in ... Dr. Bartelt’s quote above. The item dated 15,380 was found in “Frozen silt 26 m below surface†by Osborn in 1940. The item dated 21,300 was found “With beaver dam†by Geist in 1948 and has an unreliable date because it was soaked in glycerine. These are not the same animal. Furthermore both creationist sources refer to “the†Fairbanks Creek mammoth as if there was only one.

Source: http://members.cox.net/ardipithecus/evo ... ie001.html

As to the Colorado Creek mammoths, the claim that two different animals died on two separate occasions in roughly the same location, so invalidating C14 dating, is absurd. Indeed, one suspects a deliberate attempt to mislead the reader by implying that the paper in question returns two different C14 dates for animals that died at about the same time and in the same location. From the abstract of the referred to paper (Stratigraphy of the Colorado Creek mammoth locality, Alaska, by Robert M. Thorson and R. Dale Guthrie):

The Colorado Creek mammoth locality in west-central Alaska contains the remains of two mammoths that were scavenged by carnivores. Sedimentologic interpretations of the reworked eolian deposits surrounding the bones, supplemented by 10 radiocarbon dates, indicate that the lower and upper mammoths died and were buried within separate, but superimposed, thaw gullies about 23,000 and 16,000 yr ago, respectively.

Source: http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve ... 949290083U

So as the first seven examples that you have referenced have all been shown to be deceptive, and most likely intentionally so, you might want to reflect on the likely reliability of the remaining claims, especially if they originate from the same source.
 
So you're saying in the vast majority of cases they cannot rely on radiometrics for fossils? (due to lack of surrounding igneous rock)

"Majority" would be a stretch, but "often" would not. Then there are other methods to consider.

How do they date them then?

They could do it the way people did before physics worked out the process; the law of superposition allows you to get relative dates, and if you can fix them with strata of known age, you can get approximate ages. And index fossils can refine that further. But sometimes, we end up with as much as 10% variance or more.

The geologic column? That glass experiment kind of throws taht up in the air.

Nope. It's very reliable. It was invented by creationists, BTW.
 
Ashua said:
As for the farce of the geologic column, put some soil in a glass, pour some water on top of it, and stir it around. You will see strata form right before your eyes.
You will get layers when you do that, but these are sorted by particle size and density. The geologic column is not sorted in any such way. What conclusion would you draw from this?
 
Indeed. Except for drumlins (which are produced by ice, not fluids) sorted particle size usually means a single flow.
 
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