wow ... another can of worms.
as someone who has no problem with evolution once life began I did not pay much attention to the carbon dating issue.
That is a very good question... how is it that things millions of years old have detectable levels of c-14. We should only be able to date things about 60,000 years old and younger?
Did c-4 decay in spurts or at faster levels in the past?
How does this thought get impacted if c-14 relaxes faster than bern convention?
no wonder piezoe stopped thinking about this.
how can I do my work this afternoon?
as someone who has no problem with evolution once life began I did not pay much attention to the carbon dating issue.
That is a very good question... how is it that things millions of years old have detectable levels of c-14. We should only be able to date things about 60,000 years old and younger?
Did c-4 decay in spurts or at faster levels in the past?
How does this thought get impacted if c-14 relaxes faster than bern convention?
no wonder piezoe stopped thinking about this.
how can I do my work this afternoon?
But Richter this is exactly what I feared. This suggests two thing, one of which is wrong. C-14 in fossil fuels is not zero! Though it should be in theory. It apparently isn't known for sure why it is not zero but several explanations have been proposed. The other thing the article suggests is that all the very old natural sources of CO2, and therefore also very low in C-14, are just being ignored! I'd certainly like to know why these can be ignored, Volcanoes for example. Ocean CO2 too should be just a bit lower in C14 than the atmosphere, I doubt that is significant though. (I won't go into why that should be. Ask if you're curious.) But what about that whopping spike in C-14 in the mid 1950. We will see a steady decline in atmospheric C-14 from the 195Os on. I hope someone is paying attention to THAT! (Until I can read one of the peer reviewed papers on this topic my education forces me to remain skeptical.)
Please don't assume I am concluding that the recent increase in atmospheric CO2 is not due to man. I am not concluding anything of the sort. It very well could be, but at the same time it very well may not be! I just want the science to make sense.