Geologic Dating: Accuracy and Methods

  • Thread starter Thread starter Mentat
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Accuracy
AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on the various methods geologists and paleontologists use to date rocks and fossils, emphasizing the importance of accuracy and the margin of error associated with each technique. Key dating methods include radiometric dating, stratigraphy, and biostratigraphy, with radiometric dating generally regarded as the most accurate, though it has specific limitations and potential errors depending on the isotopes used. The conversation also raises concerns about how external factors, such as a hypothetical large canopy of water or a global flood, could impact dating methods. These scenarios suggest that sedimentary layers might become mixed, complicating stratigraphic analysis and potentially affecting the reliability of radiometric dating due to reduced cosmic ray exposure. The inquiry seeks to clarify these points for a friend who is interested but hesitant to engage directly in the discussion.
Mentat
Messages
3,935
Reaction score
3
No, I'm not talking about courting strategies , I'm talking about the methods by which geologists date rocks and paleontologists date fossils.

First off, I'd like to know what the different methods are.

But, more importantly, I'd like to know how accurate they are...what is the margin of error on each method? Which is the most accurate method? Which is the least accurate?

Any info on this is appreciated.

P.S. if this belongs in some other forum, please move it, it just seemed to fit here.
 
Earth sciences news on Phys.org
I'd like to do something now that I very rarely do. I'm going to combine another thread on this forum (entitled "Water Canopy") with this one, and add the question: What effect would a large Canopy of water have on the dating methods? What effect would a global flood have? Would not the sedimentary strata be "mixed up" a bit? Would not the radiometric dating be a bit confused by the lesser amounts of cosmic rays reaching the surface, due to the Canopy?

Note: These particular questions are not my own. A good friend of mine (creationist, unfortunately) wishes for an answer, but doesn't wish to become a member (yet?).

So, any answers to these questions are doubly appreciated :smile:.
 
Thanks, Ambitwistor! :smile:

Good sites.
 
Thread 'The Secrets of Prof. Verschure's Rosetta Stones'
(Edit: since the thread title was changed, this first sentence is too cryptic: the original title referred to a Tool song....) Besides being a favorite song by a favorite band, the thread title is a straightforward play on words. This summer, as a present to myself for being promoted, I purchased a collection of thin sections that I believe comprise the research materials of Prof. Rob Verschure, who at the time was faculty in the Geological Institute in Amsterdam. What changed this...
These last days, there is a seemingly endless cluster of rather powerful earthquakes close to the islands of Santorini, Amorgos, Anafi, and Ios. Remember, this is a highly volcanically active region, Santorini especially being famous for the supervolcanic eruption which is conjectured to have led to the decline of the Minoan civilization: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minoan_eruption To grasp the scale of what is happening, between the 26th of January and the 9th of February, 12000...
Back
Top