Friday, 20 September 2024

Continuing debate with David C. Campbell on YEC, OE, Palaeontology


HGL's F.B. writings: Debate on Geology · Creation vs. Evolution: 4.5 Billion Years Worth of Nuclear Decay, Before the End of Day Three? · Correspondence of Hans Georg Lundahl: Continuing debate with David C. Campbell on YEC, OE, Palaeontology · Continued Debate with David C. Campbell · Mr. Campbell is Back · Mr. Campbell. Can you guess? Is. Back.

FB mail exchange with David C. Campbell

Friday 22:20,
6.IX.2024
Vous avez envoyé
Good day!

Are you a palaeontologist?

If so, one Jeffrey (presumably Greenberg sent me to you:

Debate on Geology
https://hglsfbwritings.blogspot.com/2024/09/debate-on-geology.html


LD 20:47,
8.IX.2024
David C. Campbell
Yes, I am a paleontologist. My research emphasizes mollusks, with most experience in the southeastern US. However, having worked in museums and done plenty of reading, I am familiar with global paleontology. As with all other areas of geology, paleontology clearly contradicts the claims of modern young-earth creationism.

Monday 21:30,
9.IX.2024
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OK.

One YEC which I don't know how Palaeontology is supposed to contradict, is this.

During the Flood, most bigger fossils that are recognisable (like a T Rex or a Procynosuchus delaharpeae looking like a T Rex or a Procynosuchus delaharpeae) would have been buried in situ.

This means, land fauna would have been buried on the places that were land in pre-Flood times. As to aquatic fauna, it could be buried above land, if floating into an area during the Flood before getting killed, but they could not be below land fauna, and they could not alternative with land fauna.

Land fauna being on the single land surface could not have several levels of itself, for instance, no Procynosuchus delaharpeae from the Permian straight below a T Rex from the Jurassic.

Exactly where on earth do we find land fauna contradicting this prediction?

Tuesday 15:05
10.IX.2024
David C. Campbell
Land or freshwater and ocean fauna alternate in many parts of the world. Historically, the classic example is the Paris Basin, surveyed by Cuvier and Brongniart in the late 1700's. But most coastal parts of the world have some alternation between land and ocean deposits. For example, all of Florida has oceanic rock, with patches of later land deposits, and sometimes back and forth is preserved. The midwestern US has Paleozoic ocean rocks with Pleistocene land faunas. Much of the classic western North American area for dinosaurs and large land mammals has some alternation of ocean and land deposits, with land deposits above ocean. Occasional land animals wash out into the ocean as well.

Likewise, many areas have multiple layers of land and freshwater faunas, one above another. The Triassic to Jurassic rift basins along the eastern US have multiple layers of land deposits. Some have younger land and ocean layers alternating above them. Many coal deposits have many layers of land and freshwater deposits associated with them. The Badlands area of South Dakota has multiple land layers, as do the Mesozoic and early Cenozoic land deposits in areas famous for dinosaurs in the western US. It is actually extremely common to have marine sedimentary rocks below terrestrial sedimentary rocks.

Thursday 02:31,
12.IX.2024
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"Many coal deposits have many layers of land and freshwater deposits associated with them."

Could this be because floating log mats are identified as land layers when they became coal?

Obviously, even if coal is floating log mats in the Flood, it won't be just the logs, it will be some other land biota along with it ... or did I misunderstand what you were saying?

But I'd appreciate if you dropped "many" and concentrated on one clear example.

"The Triassic to Jurassic rift basins along the eastern US have multiple layers of land deposits. Some have younger land and ocean layers alternating above them."

Alternating at what angle, and how many of the land layers include actual land vertebrate fauna?

Again, one clear example is more instructive than a broad range of applications to a sweeping statement.

"It is actually extremely common to have marine sedimentary rocks below terrestrial sedimentary rocks."

In how many cases does this involve actual vertebrate fauna in each layer and this at angles, like more vertical than 45° ideally?

Friday 00:14
13.IX.2024
David C. Campbell
No, the floating mat model is not compatible either with flood geology or actual geological evidence. Flood geology implies violently catastrophic flooding which would melt the earth, which is not compatible with floating mats with trees and land animals. Also, coal seams commonly do have roots extanding into the ground under them; although some of the plant material moved around some (such as washing into the ocean), much coal shows ample evidence of being depostied in place.

Vertebrate faunas are present in multiple layers on top of each other in many parts of the world. Classic examples include the Badlands of South Dakota and the Jurassic to early Cenozoic layers of the prime dinosaur-hunting regions of the western US and Canada. In these areas, often they layers are largley flat; however, they are extremely tilted in places such as along the front of the Rockies in central Colorado.

Friday 13:21
13.IX.2024
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"Flood geology implies violently catastrophic flooding which would melt the earth,"

Alleged consequence =/= obvious implication.

"Also, coal seams commonly do have roots extanding into the ground under them;"

A log mat which was uprooted from original place would probably get some roots into as yet soft mud during the Flood.

"although some of the plant material moved around some (such as washing into the ocean), much coal shows ample evidence of being depostied in place."

How would you know the difference between deposition in place and deposition after floating around as a log mat?

"Vertebrate faunas are present in multiple layers on top of each other in many parts of the world."

Many parts of the world is not one place.

"Classic examples include the Badlands of South Dakota"

What exact place there involves digging down and finding a "later-period" fossil, and digging further down and finding an "earlier-period" fossil? Specifically land vertebrate.

Land non-vertebrates are often small enough to remain intact even if not deposited in situ and aquatic vertebrates we would expect several layers on top of each other, we would expect for instance sharks over trilobites and Mosasaurs or whales over sharks. So, two of more layers of land vertebrates. On top of each other.

"In these areas, often they layers are largley flat;"

I'm specifically looking for flat, non-tilted layers. The lower discovery through further digging.

"however, they are extremely tilted in places such as along the front of the Rockies in central Colorado."

Apart from the fact I wasn't looking for tilted, how would you diagnose layers as tilted in those parts?

Friday 23:41
13.IX.2024
David C. Campbell
The modern creation science movement originated in the mid-1800s, with the misapplication of “Enlightenment” bias to the Bible and claiming that the Bible had to be talking about science to be true. It reflects a misinterpretation of selected verses rather than a thorough effort to understand either Scripture or creation. Throughout the early church and medieval times, various ideas about the age of the earth were discussed in the church. As geologic study began to look at evidence for the age of the earth in the mid-1600’s, it gradually became more and more obvious that immense amounts of time were required to explain what was observed. This was not generally seen as a problem for the Bible. The “history” claimed by atheists and young-earthers is not true.

"Flood geology implies violently catastrophic flooding which would melt the earth," Alleged consequence =/= obvious implication.

In order to have all of the plate tectonic motion recorded in the geological record fitting into a single year, the heat required would melt the earth. The energy required to supply or remove enough water to flood the earth would produce enough heat to melt the earth. Speeding up radiometric decay as advocated in the RATE project would produce enough heat to melt the earth (which they admit but ignore). These are not alleged consequences. But the implications are indeed obvious.

“ "Also, coal seams commonly do have roots extanding into the ground under them;" A log mat which was uprooted from original place would probably get some roots into as yet soft mud during the Flood.

First, you need to have a coherent model for the Flood and demonstrate what would actually happen under those circumstances rather than claiming that it could do anything you want it to. If the continents are zipping around at 45 mph, log mats don’t have a chance. If the flood is calm enough to have a mat, you can’t have all the violent geologic events squeezed into a short period of time. Second, many coal layers have soil layers with extensive evidence of roots under them, not merely the occasional root that could be squashed into them after deposition. Yes, it is possible to tell the difference. You also need to consider whether you are applying the same standard of proof to the young-earth claims as you are to honest biblical old-earth geology.

“Many parts of the world is not one place. “ No, it’s lots of places. And each one has the pattern that you are claiming doesn’t exist.

“"Classic examples include the Badlands of South Dakota" What exact place there involves digging down and finding a "later-period" fossil, and digging further down and finding an "earlier-period" fossil? Specifically land vertebrate. Land non-vertebrates are often small enough to remain intact even if not deposited in situ and aquatic vertebrates we would expect several layers on top of each other, we would expect for instance sharks over trilobites and Mosasaurs or whales over sharks. So, two of more layers of land vertebrates. On top of each other.

Multiple layers of land vertebrates are found throughout the upper western Great Plains regions. On top of each other. https://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2003/0035/pdf/of03-35.pdf is an overview of the stratigraphy at Badlands National Park. The marine Pierre Shale and Fox Hills Formation (with major changes in the types of fossils found in them as you go up through the layers) are overlain by multiple layers of land and freshwater deposits with many land vertebrates.

Further west (much of eastern Montana, for example), the Judith River Formation, a famous dinosaur-bearing layer, is under the Bearpaw marine deposit, followed by more dinosaurs in the terrestrial Hell Creek Formation.

“"In these areas, often they layers are largley flat;" I'm specifically looking for flat, non-tilted layers. The lower discovery through further digging. "however, they are extremely tilted in places such as along the front of the Rockies in central Colorado." Apart from the fact I wasn't looking for tilted, how would you diagnose layers as tilted in those parts?

You mentioned tilted in your previous post. Given that dinosaurs did not simply walk up a steep muddy slope, the tilting of the layers is quite apparent at Dinosaur Ridge (https://dinoridge.org/visit-dinosaur-ridge/dinosaur-ridge-trail/ ). Also, the ridge has Jurassic land vertebrate layers overlain by Cretaceous land layers with the trackways.

Saturday 14:24
Feast of Holy Cross
14.IX.2024
Vous avez envoyé
History of ideas is closer to my field than to yours.

"The modern creation science movement originated in the mid-1800s, with the misapplication of “Enlightenment” bias to the Bible and claiming that the Bible had to be talking about science to be true."

In fact, no such thing.

"It reflects a misinterpretation of selected verses rather than a thorough effort to understand either Scripture or creation. Throughout the early church and medieval times, various ideas about the age of the earth were discussed in the church."

Yes, whether LXX or Vulgate was the better key to Genesis 5 and 11. Whether the creation days were 168 hours or just one (nano-)second, possibly followed by gestation time. How to count the years in between Exodus and Temple. How many years did the kingdom of Judah last. Did Jesus come in Daniel's 63rd of 61st week. How long after the captivity was the start of the weeks. But NOT wether the days could be longer periods, that's a misreading for them corresponding to longer periods after Adam sinned (and yes, Jesus came and remade man in the sixth of these).

"As geologic study began to look at evidence for the age of the earth in the mid-1600’s, it gradually became more and more obvious that immense amounts of time were required to explain what was observed."

Steno was a Flood geologist. James Hutton was a Deist, and he wrote on Siccar point in 1788.

"This was not generally seen as a problem for the Bible. The “history” claimed by atheists and young-earthers is not true."

About Protestantism. All through the 19th C. from Lyell to the 1890's, we Catholics defended Young Earth Creationism (as the traditional doctrine), Day-Age AND Gap Theories. All pious Catholics agreed that the history of man at least was the Biblical history from Adam on, that Abraham lived some time between 2000 to 3000 + (perhaps a bit beyond that, but not by too much) after Creation of man. Carbon dating now puts this in conflict with any Old Earth theory, but in a YEC setting, with atmosphere being young, this is still feasible.

I do not have this history from Atheists or from YEC but from the article Hexaëmeron by the Jesuit Mangenot in 1920, in Paris, he rejected all three and introduced sth very close to Framework Hypothesis.

"In order to have all of the plate tectonic motion recorded in the geological record fitting into a single year, the heat required would melt the earth."

I suppose you mean things like motion from Pangaea and Gondwana? Because I'd dispute that this was the actual configuration of continents prior to the Flood. I would also dispute that the tectonic motion ceased just after the Flood, I would on the contrary say significant motion continued up to Babel times (350 to 401 after the Flood).

Plus, the plates would anyway be gliding over molten magma. Hence my underlining that the consequence is alleged.

"Speeding up radiometric decay as advocated in the RATE project would produce enough heat to melt the earth (which they admit but ignore)."

Not if it was limited to certain quantities of Uranium. And even then I'd extend the "quicker process" far beyond the single year.

"an overview of the stratigraphy at Badlands National Park."

Can't open it in this library.

"the Judith River Formation, a famous dinosaur-bearing layer, is under the Bearpaw marine deposit, followed by more dinosaurs in the terrestrial Hell Creek Formation."

I know enough about Hell Creek to know that a Formation is not a place, nor is it restricted to a place.

"You mentioned tilted in your previous post."

I think you misunderstood sth else.

// In how many cases does this involve actual vertebrate fauna in each layer and this at angles, like more vertical than 45° ideally? //

I didn't mean the verticality within a single layer (which if so would be very tilted). I meant verticality between the layers, so as to exclude that the "different layers" are biotopes side by side. I mean, if you dig down one metre and find a Stegosaur, and then you find a Dimetrodon ten metres below the Stegosaur, I would like the Dimetrodon to be straight under the Stegosaur, not further away from the vertical line than ten metres.

"Also, the ridge has Jurassic land vertebrate layers overlain by Cretaceous land layers with the trackways."

Are the Cretaceous layers also involving land vertebrates? Or does "trackways" just mean footprints?

Monday 23:34
16.IX.2024
David C. Campbell
Not just the difference between the LXX and Masoretic. Many Christians advocated the idea that creation was eternal, yet created; they thought that God as Creator needed a corresponding creation. Others thought that the time of creation was a finite, but vast, time back into the past, with no clear evidence of the date. Others thought that the time since the days of Genesis 1 through 2:3 was fairly completely accounted for in Scripture, but within that there were some who thought that the chaos of Genesis 1:2 might have lasted for a noticeable amount of time before the 7 days and some who did not. The Fourth Lateran Council rejected the idea of a co-eternal creation, though that did not prevent people from continuing to talk about the idea, but the other options remained within the range of western orthodoxy. Ivano Dal Prete’s On the Edge of Eternity. The Antiquity of the Earth in Medieval and Early Modern Europe, Oxford University Press, 2022 goes into detail with many examples of ancient earth ideas in pre-modern Europe.

Steno did not hold to modern Flood Geology. But he did not follow up beyond his initial publications. A wide range of workers studied geology in the late 1600’s through the later 1700’s, building on Steno’s (and others’) ideas. For example, one priest noted that the lava flow from the roughly 200-year old flow on Mount Etna still looked pretty fresh. But digging for a well found a series of seven layers where a lava flow had covered soil that had weathered from an older flow. He guessed that each of those must have taken at least a couple thousand years. And the volcano is on top of some rather young geologic layers. Another priest objected to this suggestion. The papal authorities investigated, found that the old-earther was right, and formally suppressed the claims of the young-earther in the latest 1700’s.

Carbon dating supports a biblical timeline. Before Abraham, there is not enough detail to definitely say that particular archaeological remains match with particular parts of the Bible. But Abraham’s world is recognizably early second millennium BC in the Near East. Carbon dating confirms that somebody burned down impressive buildings in the late 900’s BC – Pharoah Shishak raiding Rehoboam and Jeroboam (and bragging about it in hieroglyphics), that Hezekiah’s tunnel was built in Hezekiah’s time, etc. While demonstrating that certain young-earth claims about changing decay rates are untrue, this doesn’t say much else about age of the earth before Abraham.

“Because I'd dispute that this was the actual configuration of continents prior to the Flood. I would also dispute that the tectonic motion ceased just after the Flood, I would on the contrary say significant motion continued up to Babel times (350 to 401 after the Flood).”

The evidence of past plate motion is based on a wide range of evidence, with a series of multiple supercontinents; Pangea being the most recent. No, moving continents on magma does not speed them up enough to make a young-earth view possible. Besides, cooling that magma in a few thousand years doesn’t work. You do not have any valid geological reason to dispute that was the configuration of the continents; you are simply rejecting it because it conflicts with young-earth claims. You need to critically examine all the evidence. Basic laws of thermodynamics, the ones that young-earthers like to claim pose challenges for evolution, are what tell us that creation science models would melt the earth. Dismissing all the evidence as alleged does not make it sound like you are seriously considering it.

"Speeding up radiometric decay as advocated in the RATE project would produce enough heat to melt the earth (which they admit but ignore)." Not if it was limited to certain quantities of Uranium. And even then I'd extend the "quicker process" far beyond the single year.

Speeding up radiometric decay alters very basic laws of physics. Atoms can’t exist if you change the laws. You can’t just play around with the numbers because you want them to fit a young earth; you have to seriously examine what the actual consequences would be. There’s more thorium than uranium around, as well as plenty of potassium-40 and hundreds of other radioactive isotopes. All of the isotopes that last long enough to give any information about the age of the earth point to ages older than is compatible with young-earth claims.

“I know enough about Hell Creek to know that a Formation is not a place, nor is it restricted to a place.” No, it is found in lots of places. Where the next layer down, the Bearpaw, is also exposed, the one underneath is marine and the Hell Creek has land fauna. That’s what you said shouldn’t exist in a flood model. You need to recognize that the geologic record does clearly show land deposits on top of ocean deposits and different land deposits on top of other land deposits, and either come up with a revised flood model or admit that you don’t currently have a good model. How could your flood produce layers with totally different marine life, one layer after another? You need to develop specific models, see if they work, and make corrections.

Right at Dinosaur Ridge, the Stegosaurus bones and other Jurassic fossils (including some footprints) are under a layer with Cretaceous footprints. Elsewhere you can find Cretaceous bones in the layers above the Jurassic bones, but I don’t know if there are Cretaceous bones right at Dinosaur Ridge.

Tuesday 15:28
17.IX.2024
Vous avez envoyé
I have not read the book by Ivano Dal

"Many Christians advocated the idea that creation was eternal, yet created; they thought that God as Creator needed a corresponding creation."

Wait, are we talking Christians in general or Christians of the type considered authoritative by Catholics as in Church Fathers, Doctors and at least saints?

Averroism was condemned by Tempier as much as it was refuted by St. Thomas.

"Others thought that the time of creation was a finite, but vast, time back into the past, with no clear evidence of the date."

I've heard a rumour Jerome thought this about spiritual creatures, but have no trace of this applying to material creation.

"Others thought that the time since the days of Genesis 1 through 2:3 was fairly completely accounted for in Scripture, but within that there were some who thought that the chaos of Genesis 1:2 might have lasted for a noticeable amount of time before the 7 days and some who did not."

From modern Geology this is the position of one school in three. Cardinal Wiseman.

"The Fourth Lateran Council rejected the idea of a co-eternal creation, though that did not prevent people from continuing to talk about the idea, but the other options remained within the range of western orthodoxy."

I defy you to prove Gap Theory so ... if you have the book, you'll know what authors he spoke of.

"Steno did not hold to modern Flood Geology. But he did not follow up beyond his initial publications."

He had other fish to fry, getting Lutherans of Northern Europe back into the Catholic Church and dying from hardships on the road.

"A wide range of workers studied geology in the late 1600’s through the later 1700’s, building on Steno’s (and others’) ideas. For example, one priest noted that the lava flow from the roughly 200-year old flow on Mount Etna still looked pretty fresh. But digging for a well found a series of seven layers where a lava flow had covered soil that had weathered from an older flow. He guessed that each of those must have taken at least a couple thousand years. And the volcano is on top of some rather young geologic layers. Another priest objected to this suggestion. The papal authorities investigated, found that the old-earther was right, and formally suppressed the claims of the young-earther in the latest 1700’s."

Names would be helpful. Late 1700's?

"Carbon dating supports a biblical timeline. Before Abraham, there is not enough detail to definitely say that particular archaeological remains match with particular parts of the Bible. But Abraham’s world is recognizably early second millennium BC in the Near East."

Genesis 14 is recognisably carbon dated to 3500 BC.

The fact that Abraham's pharao was willing to even talk of Abraham's God suggests that he was a very early one, well before Pharaos and Khemetic priests became a very well oiled team overall (with some subteams competing).

"Carbon dating confirms that somebody burned down impressive buildings in the late 900’s BC"

I consider carbon dating reached the point of coincidence between real dates and dated dates at around the Trojan War, 1180 BC.

"The evidence of past plate motion is based on a wide range of evidence, with a series of multiple supercontinents; Pangea being the most recent."

Your sentence conflates evidence and explanation. These are opposite ends of the spectrum.

"No, moving continents on magma does not speed them up enough to make a young-earth view possible."

I have your word for it ... no calculation, however.

1) Moving on magma
2) Moving far less.

I have not seen calculations showing the problem persists.

"Besides, cooling that magma in a few thousand years doesn’t work."

I don't think you followed my proposal at all. I'm far from saying it has cooled.

"You do not have any valid geological reason to dispute that was the configuration of the continents; you are simply rejecting it because it conflicts with young-earth claims."

Or those of Bible and Tradition .... somewhat weightier than I.

"critically examine all the evidence. Basic laws ... would melt the earth ... all the evidence"

Extremely big talk. Exactly zero calculations, even such I'd find hard to follow.

"does not make it sound like you are seriously considering it."

I reserve my right to consider things flippantly, if it suits me. Especially if you are flippant enough to claim calculations you refuse to show.

"Speeding up radiometric decay alters very basic laws of physics. Atoms can’t exist if you change the laws."

I think there are quite a few known factors that can speed up decay without altering the laws of physics.

"you have to seriously examine what the actual consequences would be."

I did that with carbon 14 after hearing that kind of big claims about a speeded carbon 14 production nuke frying vertebrate life. In the end it was the Evolution side that gave up:

Correspondence of Hans Georg Lundahl : Other Check on Carbon Buildup
Thursday 23 November 2017, Posted by Hans Georg Lundahl at 09:23
https://correspondentia-ioannis-georgii.blogspot.com/2017/11/other-check-on-carbon-buildup.html


"There’s more thorium than uranium around,"

Thorium - Lead does perhaps not need Speeded up decay, could be the Lead that was there to start with (no Thorium in Zircons)

"as well as plenty of potassium-40 and hundreds of other radioactive isotopes."

How much of the argon in potassium argon dating has been verified as argon 40? I consider argon trapped from the air to be a clear option.

"All of the isotopes that last long enough to give any information about the age of the earth point to ages older than is compatible with young-earth claims."

I consider genealogies better suited than isotopes to tell us the age of the Earth, like Genesis 5 and 11.

You have not offered a total amount of what is there and what was there before decay, I think it's hard to pinpoint one.

"Where the next layer down, the Bearpaw, is also exposed, the one underneath is marine and the Hell Creek has land fauna. That’s what you said shouldn’t exist in a flood model."

I am not speaking of layers in lots of places. I am speaking of lots of layers in a place, each with palaeofauna. What location do you find Hell Creek on top, dig further down and find Bearpaw?

If it's just a matter of walking, we could be tracing a pre-Flood coastline.

"How could your flood produce layers with totally different marine life, one layer after another?"

For Grand Canyon, I already have a model. Invertebrates were swept about in diverse parts of the Flood and from diverse sources that then deposited on top of each other.

"Right at Dinosaur Ridge, the Stegosaurus bones and other Jurassic fossils (including some footprints) are under a layer with Cretaceous footprints."

I'll take the words at max value. One surge of the Flood buried the Stegosaur. Then in shallow waters a Cretaceous creature tried wading on top of the mud ...

"Elsewhere you can find Cretaceous bones in the layers above the Jurassic bones, but I don’t know if there are Cretaceous bones right at Dinosaur Ridge."

Where would be helpful.

One more:

"Steno did not hold to modern Flood Geology."

Neither did the author of Gletscher oder Sintflut. A Catholic priest.

Modern Flood Geologists do admit there was an Ice Age.

Wednesday 16:43
18.IX.2024
David C. Campbell
But not honestly. The geologic record indicates mutliple ice ages through geologic time, and multiple advances and retreats of ice during the most recent one. In the YEC ice age, glaciers advanced from Greenland to Kansas and retreated back within a few hundred years. It's ridiculous and not compatible with the geological evidence. Rather, it's merely an effort to keep fooling people even if they've heard of an ice age.

Thursday 03:25
19.IX.2024
Vous avez envoyé
If I were to say such a thing about Evolutionists, perhaps even AronRa who probably introduced the heat problem, I'd be stamped right away as a conspiracy theorist.

"The geologic record indicates"

You mean the geologic remains are compatible with being interpreted as ...

"In the YEC ice age, glaciers advanced from Greenland to Kansas and retreated back within a few hundred years. It's ridiculous"

Not if there were drastic changes in temperature.

I'd say the weather was cooled by ionising particles results of the same increase in cosmic radiation that also decreased lifespans and that also increased the carbon 14 content. This was at its most intense in the Ice Age, reaching production levels of C-14 20 times as fast as now.

By the Trojan War, 1779 years after the Flood, the pmC was up at 100 for the first time in world history.

"and not compatible with the geological evidence."

Would you mind telling me what geologic evidence clearly shows that Riss and Würm were different periods?

I note that you have (at least for the moment) left superposition of land vertebrate faunas aside ...

Thursday 23:07
19.IX.2024
David C. Campbell
Well, you weren't listening on the superposition of land faunas. There's Triassic land faunas on top of Permian in South Africa, for example. At Tar Heel, NC, there's a layer with Cretaceous land plants and occasional dinosaur material under multiple different marine layers, followed by a layer with land mammal bones. The Triassic basins in central North Carolina have a series of three formations with assorted land vertebrates, one on top of the other.

For the Pleistocene ice ages, there are many places where traces of one ice age is overlain by another, demonstrating that they were separate glacial intervals. Likewise, we have deposits that reflect the up and down of sea level as glaciers melt and grow. This also affects the ratios of 18Oto 16O, which can be traced back and forth through time. The youngest glacial advance has meaningful 14C dates associated with it; the others are all to background. The patterns of glaciers advancing and retreating match the Milankovitch cycles in Earth's orbit, each cycle taking from about 20,000 to 100,000 years. (We can see how fast each is changing today to calculate the cycle lengths).

No, changing temperature fast enough to send glaciers back and forth from Greenland to Kansas and back in 500 years is not reasonable. If you want to be credible, examine your models, rather uncritically accepting anything young-earth and inventing bad excuses to ignore the evidence. An honest young-earth position has to admit to problems.

Friday 06:01
20.IX.2024
Vous avez envoyé
"Well, you weren't listening on the superposition of land faunas."

I totally was. YOU are the one who weren't listening to my actual question.

I specified, I think more than once, that in order for me to admit that X is above Y, I don't ask whether the wharves surrounding X get above the wharves surrounding Y at some horizontal point between X and Y as you walk from X to Y.

In order for me to admit that X is above Y, I want you to dig a whole that get's down to X and a little deeper down gets to Y. The angle in you dig down between the layers should ideally not exceed 45 °.

"There's Triassic land faunas on top of Permian in South Africa, for example."

No, there ain't no such thing. I actually CHECKED.

"At Tar Heel, NC, there's a layer with Cretaceous land plants and occasional dinosaur material under multiple different marine layers, followed by a layer with land mammal bones."

In that case, the land mammal bones could be a post-Flood layer. The marine layers flooded the land plants and dino material before getting buried in mud themselves.

It could also be it was marine in pre-Flood times if the dino material is very fragmentary.

"For the Pleistocene ice ages, there are many places where traces of one ice age is overlain by another, demonstrating that they were separate glacial intervals."

1) How would that be diagnosed in the terrain?
2) How would you tell the difference between a progression, regression and reprogression of an ice cap at millions and at decades of a distance? The one radio-method that actually is relatively giving dates the right order is lacking for all except the last ice age, and the non-carbon methods one could use for Riss are totally moot.

"The youngest glacial advance has meaningful [C-14] C dates associated with it; the others are all to background."

Well, that would be the post-Flood ice age. In my view, between 2957 BC and 2607 BC when the Younger Dryas ended. The carbon dates would be 39,000 BP respectively 9500 BC

"(We can see how fast each is changing today to calculate the cycle lengths)."

Except this is what one would call an extrapolation from the present and into a non-extant past. The Milankovich point that you associate with the Last Ice Age would be before Creation, and the real reason is something else.

"No, changing temperature fast enough to send glaciers back and forth from Greenland to Kansas and back in 500 years is not reasonable."

In 350 years on my view.

When the production of C-14 was 20 times faster than today how much would that change temperatures due to ionising particles?

During the Little Ice Age (c. 1300 to 1800 AD), C-14 production was faster than today, and that only so much that raw carbon dates are about a century off.

"If you want to be credible, examine your models, rather uncritically accepting anything young-earth"

If you imagine I'm "uncritically accepting" and "not examining" the models proposed by the big YEC organisations, you are deluded. If you had said this face to face to me, I'd probably have hit you in the face and called you "gubbfan" in Swedish. You are an old man, possibly attained by sclerosis or very early Alzheimer since you UNCRITICALLY take over this view of me from other men YOUR generation. When I was a child, I could reasonably expect that once I was 20, I'd be treated as an adult. Today, I'm treated as an immature teen when I am 56, by people who are probably above 70, maybe 80, and enjoy the power of infantilising others that their social leverage can give them. Why didn't you make a quiverfull instead of trying to treat other people's sons like your own?

What the likes of YOU find credible is without relevance to me. YOU are not credible about South Africa. Did you really miss my link in response to Jeff Greenberg about my correspondence with South Africa?

Correspondence of Hans Georg Lundahl : Contacting Karoo about superposition of layers and fossils
https://correspondentia-ioannis-georgii.blogspot.com/2015/06/contacting-karoo-about-superposition-of.html


If you wish to mentor people, do so with people who are still immature enough to want a mentor and also gullible enough to trust you.

"and inventing bad excuses to ignore the evidence."

I'm not ignoring any evidence. I simply not subscribing to your conclusions about it. Often enough presented without your offering even a small resumé about what the evidence (the factors in the ground, for instance) is.

"An honest young-earth position has to admit to problems."

Admitting to problems and admitting I have sinned have one thing in common. The problems for YEC as I see them, and the sins I have committed as I see them, may not be the problems you wish to present me, and not be the sins some Evangelicals would credit me with.


I sent him a link to this, somewhat belatedly, he responded, not sure if one should say "graciously" given I had expressed a desire to punch him, or very ungraciously, given he continues the provication. Upcoming on 3.X, day of St. Therese of the Child Jesus and of the Holy Face.

Saturday, 27 July 2024

Non-réponse par SNE


Φιλολoγικά/Philologica : Parutions en 1934 (selon la wikipédie) · Correspondence de Hans Georg Lundahl : Non-réponse par SNE · New blog on the kid : On essaie de me donner des astuces sur la publication

I

De moi à courrier SNE
Envoyé : jeudi 25 juillet 2024 21:11
Objet : Nouveau message de Contact
[formulaire]

Civilité
Monsieur

Prénom
Hans Georg

Nom
Lundahl

Société / Organisme / Entreprise
Antimodernism

E-mail
hgl@dr.com

Téléphone
[—]

Votre message
D'abord, le téléphone n'est qu'un vieux fixe qui n'existe plus depuis 1993. En Suède en plus.

La question que je pose est en deux parties :

II

De courrier SNE à moi
7/26/2024 à 10:14 AM
RE: Nouveau message de Contact
Bonjour,
Les services du Sne n’étant réservés qu’aux maisons d’éditions qui y sont adhérent, nous vous invitons à prendre contact avec un juriste ou un avocat pour toutes les questions portant sur la propriété intellectuelle.

Cordialement,
Le Syndicat national de l’édition

Thursday, 25 July 2024

With Christian Publishing House


Creation vs. Evolution: Old Earth Creationism : Incompatible With Science · Correspondence of Hans Georg Lundahl: With Christian Publishing House

Christian Publishing House has written this:

Christian Publishing House: How Should a Christian Understand the Age of the Earth Controversy?
Edward D. Andrews, 23.VII.2024
https://www.christianpublishers.org/post/how-should-a-christian-understand-the-age-of-the-earth-controversy


I responded like this:

Creation vs. Evolution: Old Earth Creationism : Incompatible With Science
https://creavsevolu.blogspot.com/2024/07/old-earth-creationism-incompatible-with.html


I sent a notification to them, and got an answer, which I answered twice. All of the below so far from St. James' Day, after First Vespers.

I

Christian Pub House to me
7/24/2024 at 6:58 PM
Christian Pub House sent you a new message
I would disagree, and the article that I posted would show evidence that destroys YEC. If you need more, see my book below.

THE CREATION DAYS OF GENESIS: Were the Creation Days Literally 24 Hours Long?
https://www.amazon.com/dp/1949586871

II

Me to Christian Pub House
7/24/2024 at 7:08 PM
Re: Christian Pub House sent you a new message
If you want a review of it, please send me (for free) a copy to:

Hans Georg Lundahl
c/o ESI St. Martin
27 ter, Bd de St. Martin
FR-75003, Paris, FRANCE

I perused the article once again, and if you gave evidence that "destroys YEC" I would like in what paragraph you think you did that.

Or did you mean in the links attached below, which one would be most appropriate?

III

Me to Christian Pub House
7/25/2024 at 5:08 AM
Re: Christian Pub House sent you a new message
My essay 1015 words without footnotes, 1402 with them.
Your essay, 2700 words. Without the recommended reading.

Everything you had to state against YEC had to do with six days, except one tiny passage I just noted.

This brings me to the point, God had arguably already created all the male animals, before the forming of Adam, God then created the female animals in front of him, and when he named them, he brought them to their males.

I think a few hours of this would make him wonder if there was any female anywhere for him. He hadn't seen one.

Neither your answer, nor the actual essay adress:

  • we need a short total history of mankind for Adam's story to reach Moses unadulterated
  • we need a short total history of mankind for the delay about God's promise to be reasonable
  • the short total history of mankind we therefore need is incompatible with modern ways of ascertaining Old Earth (4.5 billion years isn't geology, it's U-Pb, if I recall correctly)
  • the short total history of mankind we therefore need is incompatible with the atmosphere having 100 pmC or close when La Ferrassie or Mungo Lake 1 were around
  • the low carbon 14 levels needed in their times are incompatible with a very old atmosphere


I could add on the latter vein, you are even destroying Genesis 14 by Old Earth, given carbon dates.

  • Abraham was contemporary with a Mesopotamian invasion of Palestine
  • this invasion targetted Amorrhaeans or Amorrhites of En-Geddi (Asason-Tamar in the text "which is En Geddi" as per II Paralipomenon 20:2)
  • the only or at least latest population that could be concerned is a Chalcolithic one carbon dated to 3500 BC
  • Abraham being c. 80 (between vocation and birth of Ishmael) would be sth like 1935 BC, which would make the carbon date involve 1565 extra years
  • for 1565 extra years you have an atmospheric carbon level as the carbon level now in a sample actually 1565 years old, namely 82.753 pmC, which is too low unless the atmosphere was still when carbon 14 levels were rising.


In return, grant a young atmosphere, grant this event would have been carbon dated to 3500 BC (or actually was, Nahal Mishmar hoard probably coming there by Amorrhites hiding it from Mesopotamians precisely in the Genesis 14 event), and you have explained why Mesopotamian sources (of the type generally seen as historic rather than mythological) are silent on this and on the five kings. Carbon dated 3500 BC is before any culture produced coherent texts in more than just proto-writing. Proto-Cuneiform may have existed, but if so was used to "belongs to so and so" "five lambs for two cows" and things.

You have totally ignored the scientific and recent evidence for a dilemma between YEC and contradicting the Bible in ways you absolutely can't cover by your "exegesis" of Genesis 1. You have just repeated talking points from 100 years ago, and omitted the scientific ones, part of which are more than amply answered by Flood Geology.

Hans Georg Lundahl


Towards Second Vespers, I have still not received any answers to my answers. I think the return mail was manipulated to make an answer reaching the publisher impossible, I'll use the support mail. — Done. Attached a (I) to mail II above, and a (II) to mail III./HGL

Wednesday, 24 April 2024

With Jeremy Sherman PhD


Assorted retorts from yahoo boards and elsewhere: Jeremy Sherman Rambles Without a Due Look on Ultimates · Where is Jeremy Sherman from? · Correspondence of Hans Georg Lundahl: With Jeremy Sherman PhD

I

Me to Jeremy Sherman PhD
4/24/2024 at 11:08 PM
I posted an answer to your comment under my comment twice
It disappeared both times.

As our dialogue is on our blog, here is the post:

Assorted retorts from yahoo boards and elsewhere: Jeremy Sherman Rambles Without a Due Look on Ultimates
https://assortedretorts.blogspot.com/2024/04/jeremy-sherman-rambles-without-due-look.html


II

Jeremy Sherman PhD to me
4/24/2024 at 11:33 PM
Re: I posted an answer to your comment under my comment twice
It didn’t disappear. I get to approve comments. I hear your fierce defense and dismissal of my suggestions. On contact. It seems like they must feel like poison to you. Such urgency to wipe them away.

I can assure you, you don’t have to worry about them. Carry on believing whatever feels true to you.

III

Me to Jeremy Sherman PhD
4/25/2024 at 2:19 AM
Re: I posted an answer to your comment under my comment twice
Thanks for showing heavy psychologising, as well as a disposition for censorship.

On my blogs, I have rarely deleted comments other than spam for Indonesian casinos, and once I did so, it was to put the dialogue into a separate post rather than keep the comments section getting longer and longer.

"Fierce" / "dismissal" / "feel like poison" / "such urgency"

I think the real urgency to swipe things away is on your side, as your action shows, I take argument as argument and reply with argument.

I hope you will one day have to worry about this dialogue, for the sake of your professional reputation.

Hans Georg Lundahl

IV

Jeremy Sherman PhD to me
4/25/2024 at 6:02 AM
Re: I posted an answer to your comment under my comment twice
Hi Hans,

Well, obviously we're both engaged in psychologizing, so the interesting question for me is how to do it ethically. Here's my answer. I've written a fair amount about it. We're both entitled to our respective interpretations of each other's behavior. It's perfectly with me if you come to the conclusion that I'm a dim and benighted thinker who is too scared to deal with the truths you offer. I get that lots. Oh, and that because I didn't share your pearls of wisdom, it's proof that I'm scared of your wisdom and closed minded.

I hope you're fine with me guessing that you're kind of lonely and get off on pretending that you're straightening out the dimwits of the world who don't see things your way. Why do I guess that? You're opening gambit was not about respectful engagement in mutual curiosity. You seem to think that you can win hearts and minds by pulling rank on them. I don't know where you learned that. I'm guessing you had a teacher or parent who did that effectively with you when you were young.

It doesn't work with me. It doesn't work with most people. When I hear people do pull rank like that, I strongly suspect that they are m...ing in public for the enjoyment or perhaps because of a deficit in self-confidence. Me, I love m...ion in all it's forms. If you look at my other videos you'll see that I think that self-pleasuring to self-aggrandizement is a basic human need. But how we do it matters. I say self-love is important but get a room, don't let it go to your head, and don't turn the public forum into your m...ion nest by trolling or prothletising like you've solved reality and anyone who disagrees with you is a dim wit.

But again let me assure you. You are under no obligation to consider my opinion worthy of your attention. I've decided to show my respect to you, not by humoring you or by silence but by respecting your ability to hear another person's opinion for whatever it's worth.

I wish you well.

Jeremy

V

Me to Jeremy Sherman PhD
4/25/2024 at 3:59 PM
Re: I posted an answer to your comment under my comment twice
"It's perfectly with me if you come to the conclusion that I'm a dim and benighted thinker who is too scared to deal with the truths you offer."

I did not arrive there before you preferred psychologising over argument.

"I get that lots."

You seemed to get it way too early.

"because I didn't share your pearls of wisdom,"

I did not expect you to share them. I expected you to argue against them. If you had, psychologising would have been left alone on both sides, you started.

"You're opening gambit was not about respectful engagement in mutual curiosity."

There is in my book such a thing as respectfyl engagement in restrained animosity. That is what I had to offer.

"You seem to think that you can win hearts and minds by pulling rank on them."

Not the least. First of all, I am not sure what the expression "pulling rank" even means.

But second, because I expect a debate across such a chasm of disagreement to start with restrained animosity and just possibly sometimes, lead to winning a heart or a mind.

And third, when it doesn't, I hope to win some other mind, by exposing a bad argument in words they, even if you making that bad argument can't, they can relate to.

"I'm guessing you had a teacher or parent who did that effectively with you when you were young."

I had lots of teachers and other school encounters, who, deploring my mother's Fundamentalism actually tried it with me and failed.

Your resorting to psychologising reminds me of them.

Your next line will not be quoted.

I don't equate debating with that vice you mentioned. A certain word you used will be censored.

"by respecting your ability to hear another person's opinion for whatever it's worth."

I actually started out respecting yours. So far, you haven't earned it.

VI

Me to Jeremy Sherman PhD
4/25/2024 at 4:08 PM
Re: I posted an answer to your comment under my comment twice
Another thing.

The disadvantage of being a debater, and meeting a shrink, as a debater, I think myself under obligation to defend anything attacked, while the shrink is more like a guy thinking he should attack everything defended - by an ad hominem.

I don't think it is very heavy handed psychologising on my part why you shirk away from debating.

I didn't ever say you were a dimwit, and you know way too well, your arguments are not up for my level of debate.

There is a reason why people like you are preferring to isolate Fundies over engaging with them. And "engaging" in a psychologising way is a tactic for isolating them.

HG

VII

Jeremy Sherman PhD to me
4/25/2024 at 4:41 PM
Re: I posted an answer to your comment under my comment twice
Again, it's totally fine with me if you decide you're right about everything and I'm wrong. I'm very familiar with your arguments about why I'm out of line. I get comments and mail like yours almost daily. And you could be right. I don't rule that out.

I'm a fisher of men. I sermonize publically. But it's all catch and release. I'm out to find people who want to consider my ideas. But I don't care who in particular finds them interesting enough to think with me.

I get fan and hate mail lots.

I agree with you about shrinks. Solving other people's problems is easy, like you've been trying to solve mine, for the sake of my "professional reputation." A vocational hazard in my line of work is thinking that because you can solve other people's problems, you're an expert problem solver.

Anyway, brother Hans-Georg, I wish you well elsewhere. Humbled before your lord and lording it over anyone who disagrees with you. My ideas aren't interesting to you. That's A-OK with me. I could send you a list of people who, like you, have decided I'm wrong-headed and take my blocking as proof that they're open-minded and right about everything and that I'm a closed-minded fool who doesn't believe in free speech. It's a common troll move. I get that at least three times a week.

I wish you well elsewhere. There's room for both our kinds.

Cheers,

Jeremy

VIII

Me to Jeremy Sherman PhD
4/25/2024 at 4:08 PM
Re: I posted an answer to your comment under my comment twice
  • Your ideas are interesting to me as something to refute.
  • If you are serious, and they are not just a fancy excuse for psychologising over anyone they happen to provoke (even if to polite debate), any refutation (and that was what I offered) should be interesting to you.


You see, there is actually one kind of thing I didn't comment on in the video, that is how you used the words "popularity contest" ...

I think whereever two people differ, third party is a kind of arbiter.

In some cases, two people will differ irreconcilably, and the arbiter will divide itself into factions. But I think the appeal to the third party, with recognised rules of logic is the most rigorous testing you can get for ideas (apart from God).

So, you misconstrue "you are wrong and this is why" for "I'm right about everything and you are wrong" or "I want to lord you" or God knows what.

You persist, and you even use compliment and apparent good manners.

"like you've been trying to solve mine, for the sake of my "professional reputation.""

Not the least. People like you are surrounding me with social and mental checkpoints and doing so to my writings as well.

I'm not trying to solve your problem. I'm hoping you're the one who gets the problem, this time, instead of me.

The kind of "fisher of men" you present yourself as, is what I am myself.

What you present ME as, is what my worst enemies would love people to see me.

What I have said is not, "let me help you with your problem" what I have said is "enough is enough, it's YOUR turn to get a problem now!"

You are persisting in dishonest and calculated and therefore utterly unethical psychologising. I hope it backfires soon./HGL

IX

Jeremy Sherman PhD to me
4/25/2024 at 5:36 PM
Re: I posted an answer to your comment under my comment twice
What you don't seem to understand is that I'm not listening to you. I don't care what your opinion is of me. Like you, I keep my own counsel. I have many allies and friends whose counsel I heed. You're not among them. You're wasting your breath. I fuss elsewhere.

X

Me to Jeremy Sherman PhD
4/26/2024 at 6:35 PM
Re: I posted an answer to your comment under my comment twice
There is one thing you could do decently, in that case.

1) If you like to allow debate between me and your other listeners under your video, keep my comments where they are. Either restore my answer to your answer or delete your answer.
2) If not, delete my comments and post a link to the debate on my Assorted retorts post and our meta-non-debate on Correspondence post. So those who want to see another take than yours can go there:

Assorted retorts from yahoo boards and elsewhere: Jeremy Sherman Rambles Without a Due Look on Ultimates · Correspondence of Hans Georg Lundahl: With Jeremy Sherman PhD

What's so far happened under your video is not even half decent. It's not even half decent to an opponent to give viewers who watch the comments the impression this opponent first commented and then was satsified with your answer, as it looks when my comment is followed by yours, but not followed by my follow up. It's also not even half decent to pretend I should censor myself by deleting that comment to get this false impression away.

That's not on whether you listen, it's on whether you are decent or not to opponents. I usually am./HGL

XI

Jeremy Sherman PhD to me
4/26/2024 at 7:27 PM
Re: I posted an answer to your comment under my comment twice
You really don't get it do you. You lost all moral standing with me. I don't hear you as the authority on decency that you proclaim yourself to be.

Here's how it seems to work for all of us: If we want someone's trust – if we want to be seen as credible by someone, we have to earn it. No one owes us trust and credibility. I didn't earn your trust or credibility. You didn't assume you owed it to me. I applaud your decision that I'm not worthy of your trust. That's fine with me.

What you don't seem to get is that your precious beliefs don't make you an exception to that rule. You have quite reliably earned no trust or credibility from me. None whatsoever. In part because of your absurdly pretentious double standard: You get to decide who's worthy of your attention; other's are simply supposed to take your word that you are worthy of their attention.

Why do you indulge in such laughable hypocrisy? My guess is self-infatuated desperation and the false assumption that your beliefs make you special.

Peddle your stuff elsewhere. I'm done talking with you.

XII

Me to Jeremy Sherman PhD
4/26/2024 at 11:31 PM
Re: I posted an answer to your comment under my comment twice
My only claim to have any authority on decency is being human, so you have basically dehumanised me.

"If we want someone's trust – if we want to be seen as credible by someone, we have to earn it."

Debating you was not about having your trust.
It was not about seeming credible to you.

It was about having argument as common ground between people who have little reason apart from that to trust each other's judgement.

In other words, you are cutting away at common ground.

"What you don't seem to get is that your precious beliefs don't make you an exception to that rule."

I never used them as that, liar!

Argument and debate are not "my precious beliefs" and also did not presuppose gaining your trust.

So, you basically debate with the liars you can trust to not dislodge your house of cards before the audience.

"You get to decide who's worthy of your attention"

Not the least. Never claimed it, liar!

a) YOU decided to leave your video open to comments.
b) YOU decided to answer one of mine.

but above all

c) YOU decided to censor my answer.

If you claim I have no claim on your attention, why offer me that attention?
If you offered me that attention, and on top of that offer me this attention, why use my "non-right to attention" as argument for censorship?

The hypocrite with double standards is you.

"other's are simply supposed to take your word that you are worthy of their attention."

Not the least.

Your blast of denigration, none of which answers any of my arguments, is a very clear indication that you think me worthier of attention than you admit.

I don't seek your, I don't seek your kind of it.

And you will now be blocked, we'll see if YOU can keep quiet.

And what this will look like to others.

Sunday, 14 April 2024

Correspondences on Carbon Dating, Often Davidic and Exodus Times


I

Me to CMI
12/23/2023 at 9:30 PM
Did Finkelstein reassign 10th C to 9th C based on carbon dates?
Because, if organic material actually from the 10th C is dated as 9th C, that would mean, as I had originally predicted, when doing my recalibration, that carbon 14 levels continued to rise, after the fall of Troy PAST 100 pmC.

A 10th C organic object carbon dated as a 9th C such reads like ... an object dated 100 years too young. Which means 101.217 pmC in the original atmosphere surrounding it.

Which makes sense if the 100 pmC in 1180 BC (fall of Troy, historic and carbon date coincide) was from a rise after Fall of Jericho (real date 1470 BC, carbon date as per Kenyon 1550, 80 years too old, 99.037 pmC).

I am very intrigued to hear this ...

https://creation.com/en/podcasts/evidence-for-saul-david-and-solomon

And I'd be happy to have the details!

Hans Georg Lundahl,
wishing you about 24 hours in advance

Merry and Holy Christmas!

II

CMI to me
12/23/2023 at 9:30 PM
CMI Australia Brisbane office is closed for the Christmas holidays Re: Did Finkelstein reassign 10th C to 9th C based on carbon dates?
Thank you for contacting Creation Ministries International.

CMI Australia is closed for the Christmas holiday. Our office will re-open on Tuesday the 2 January 2024.

Warm regards,

Creation Ministries International (Australia)
ABN 31 010 120 304

PO Box 4545, Eight Mile Plains
QLD 4113 Australia
Ph: +61 (07) 3340 9888

visit us on the web at Creation.com CMI on Facebook CMI on Twitter
Vision: To see the Lord Jesus Christ honoured as Creator and Saviour of the world

Mission: To support the effective proclamation of the Gospel by providing credible answers that affirm the reliability of the Bible, in particular its Genesis history

--

Marivic Tang
Administration

Creation Ministries International (Australia)

P: +61 7 3340 9888

creation.com

Host a faith-building creation presentation—contact us today!

III

RE: (#MJV-004-31952) Fwd: Did Finkelstein reassign 10th C to 9th C based on carbon dates?
Dear Hans-Georg Lundahl,

A staff member has replied to your ticket.

CMI is a faith funded ministry. Answers are provided freely. Please consider helping the vital mission of CMI in getting out more creation information. Please support CMI

Robert Carter
Staff - 2024-01-04 2:51 PM
Hans,

I am skeptical that any simple recalibration is possible. Consider the Halstatt Plateau (aka 1st millennium BC radiocarbon disaster). This period covers some of the most important periods of biblical history, yet carbon dating fails to properly date any of it. If we have rapidly rising 14C levels, we cannot even assume the atmosphere would be fully mixed during the transition period. Throw in an Ice Age, shifting atmospheric circulation patterns, vast amounts of old carbon being dumped into the biosphere via vulcanism and via the erosion of calcium-containing rocks, a collapsing magnetic field, and who knows what bombarding us from outer space, and I fully suspect that the oldest measurements will be far from precise.

Have you seen our article How carbon dating works? I go through many of these issues there and I include a sketch of a possible calibration curve for the early post-Flood era.

How carbon dating works
by Robert W. Carter
https://creation.com/how-carbon-dating-works


Sincerely,
Robert W Carter, PhD
Scientist, Speaker, Author

Creation Ministries International (US)
Phone: (770) 439-9130 x 204
Website: creation.com
The trusted source for truth about origins

From:
Questions & Answers
Sent:
Tuesday, January 2, 2024 12:19 PM
Subject:
(#MJV-004-31952) You have been assigned to a ticket from Hans-Georg Lundahl

IV

Me to CMI / Robert Carter
1/5/2024 at 8:09 PM
Re: RE: (#MJV-004-31952) Fwd: Did Finkelstein reassign 10th C to 9th C based on carbon dates?
"If we have rapidly rising14C levels, we cannot even assume the atmosphere would be fully mixed during the transition period."

How long does mixing of new carbon take?

I'm assuming a transition period of 1772 years from 2958 BC (Noah's Flood, 1.625 pmC, carbon dated as 39 000 BP) and 1180 BC (fall of Troy, 100 pmC, we have a carbon date coinciding with the historic date by Eratosthenes).

The Hallstatt Plateau is when the level is already roughly speaking flat. It's carbon dates around 550 BC for anything between 750~760 (including the traditional date for the founding of Rome, and oldest city-scape was dated to 550 BC, presumably before the Hallstatt Plateau was discovered) and 450 BC. 200 years too young => 102.449 pmC sinking (mostly) to 100 years too old => 98.798 pmC.

When carbon 14 is being mixed into the atmosphere at a 10 to 11 times higher speed than today, as I take from Flood to both beginning and end of Babel, 350 and 401 years later (death of Noah, birth of Peleg, LXX without the II Cainan as per Julius Africanus reused by St. Jerome, whose chronology is available via Historia Scholastica and the martyrology reading for Dec 25), that means that that kind of wiggle is smoothed out compared to the rise in carbon 14 overall.

There is more room for wiggles near the end, like, I agree with David Down's Egyptology, and make Moses' birth in 1590 BC coincide with Sesostris III's death, I agree with Kenyon's carbon date as a raw one, and calibrate the raw date 1550 as an actual 1470, this would put the Exodus date in 1511 BC in principle between carbon dated 1671 and 1618 BC, but a wiggle would allow eruption of Thera to be God's tool for the ten plagues or some of them (the tenth is of course angelic beings taking action independently of that one, which could not target eldest sons), and to have the carbon date instead at c. 1609.

If you accepted that the carbon 14 mixing in the preflood world was very much slower than since, than even now, that would leave the last pre-Flood remains also near 39000 BP, or whenever you prefer to calibrate that, and this means that if you accepted Göbekli Tepe, you'd have carbon rising 25 times as fast (up to 101 after the Flood, assuming Peleg is neither a prophecy only later fulfilled nor a later assumed nickname), but of you don't, your carbon rise up to 1935 BC (Abraham is around 80 in Genesis 14, already some year after his vocation and also before the birth of Ishmael) dated as 3500 BC (as per reed mats evacuating Amorrhean treasures from Chalcolithic En-Geddi, Osgood gave me the clue, even if I disagree on his general dissing of C14), you'd still have the carbon 14 dates pass by the conventional dates of Göbekli Tepe (from charcoal, so radiocarbon), which makes it likelier than either Ziggurat of Eridu or Palaeolithic.

As mentioned, the wiggle known as Hallstatt Plateau is 3.75 pmC units, and, I happen to underline that the "ten times faster" (on my view) or "25 times faster" (on my schematic approach to Ussher), that concerns, not so much the production as production as the final mixing. 1180 BC we do have Eratosthenes date for Troy falling, we also do have a carbon date for the probably relevant level of Troy. This doesn't simply mean that enough carbon 14 exists for the atmosphere as a whole to have 100 pmC, it means mixing at ground level has already reached 100 pmC.

So, what kind of vulcanism would for instance get carbon 14 levels down from, say, 20 or 40 pmC, to c. 1 pmC, if on your view Neanderthals carbon dated to 40 000 BP are post-Babel?

And after such a fall in radiocarbon, what kind of radioactive shock would boost it up again?

I admit, I have been too schematic to calculate in that the Younger Dryas (on my view just before Noah died) would have been speeding up carbon 14 production.

Anyway, thanks, and my point was, if Finkelstein did, after such a drastic carbon rise as I posit, it could be that levels rose past 100 pmC even before the Hallstatt Plateau, which would explain Finkelstein's mistake.

Blessed Epiphany!

Hans Georg Lundahl

Creation vs. Evolution: New Tables
http://creavsevolu.blogspot.com/2020/08/new-tables.html


V

Me to CMI / Robert Carter
4/1/2024 at 3:58 PM
Re: RE: (#MJV-004-31952) Fwd: Did Finkelstein reassign 10th C to 9th C based on carbon dates? / more on carbon dates
For how long does Robert Carter / do you, Robert Carter, suppose that carbon dates are "far from precise"?

To the time when Kenyon dates Jericho?

Here is an answer to a video by Gary Bates, as long as it takes him to show he doesn't master the subject of carbon rise:

https://assortedretorts.blogspot.com/2024/04/gary-bates-egyptian-matches-bungle.html

Here is a model for early on divergence of dates that are contemporary:

HGL'S F.B. WRITINGS: Table I to II Perhaps Doubled Beginning (Upper / Lower Limits) ? · Creation vs. Evolution: Convergence of Uneven pmC?

The latter link is part of a series I updated today, all on Creation vs. Evolution:

Have you Really Taken ALL the Factors into Account? · New Tables · Why Should one Use my Tables? · And what are the lineups between archaeology and Bible, in my tables? · Bases of C14 · An example of using previous · Difference with Carbon 14 from Other Radioactive Methods · Tables I-II and II-III and III-IV, Towards a Revision? · The Revision of I-II, II-III, III-IV May be Unnecessary, BUT Illustrates What I Did When Doing the First Version of New Tables · Convergence of Uneven pmC? · [Calculation on paper commented on] · Other Revision of I-II ? · Where I Agree with Uniformitarian Dating Experts

Hans Georg Lundahl

(I'm not confident about wishing someone happy Easter if he has Calvinistic views on the Blessed Sacrament, as I suppose many of you have).

VI a
background, I saw:

Dating Methuselah's Death: Pre or Post Flood? with Henry B. Smith Jr.
Associates for Biblical Research | 8 April 2023
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6HwPmoxrK04


VI b

HGL to Biblical Archaeology Comments
4/5/2024 at 5:57 PM
Lamech 753, 707 or 777?
753 is famously how many years BC Rome was founded.

But the two other numbers also have a Roman connexion. We can agree that Il Duce ruled that city not very long ago? I mean, his Marcia su Roma was not in the pre-Flood or even at all BC era?



That was some gematria in ASCII, simple and atbash.

More seriously, thank you very much for the Methuselah problem dealt with by Henry B. Smith Jr.!

Here is my first attempt at:

a) proving the carbon 14 rise after the Flood did not happen so quickly it would have destroyed all vertebrate life
b) doing some calibration of C14 in a Biblical chronology:

1) Datation de Carbone 14, comment ça carre avec la Chronologie Biblique, 2) Correction de la table, taux de C14, et implications, 3) Multiples échecs de trouver une meilleure table que les précédentes, 4) Une hypothèse à ne pas retenir, 5) Encore un échec ... C14 ... et un double, probablement (mais je serais bref), 6) Examinons une hypothèse qui se trouve contrefactuelle un peu de près, 7) Un essai, décision de demander l'aide à un professeur de maths, 8) Avec un peu d'aide de Fibonacci ... j'ai une table, presque correcte, 9) Une table peut-être évitable ou contournable?, 10) Et les autres méthodes radioactives?

Here is my curent status of same question, with recent updates added:

Have you Really Taken ALL the Factors into Account? · New Tables · Why Should one Use my Tables? · And what are the lineups between archaeology and Bible, in my tables? · Bases of C14 · An example of using previous · Difference with Carbon 14 from Other Radioactive Methods · Tables I-II and II-III and III-IV, Towards a Revision? · The Revision of I-II, II-III, III-IV May be Unnecessary, BUT Illustrates What I Did When Doing the First Version of New Tables · Convergence of Uneven pmC? · [Calculation on paper commented on] · Other Revision of I-II ? · Where I Agree with Uniformitarian Dating Experts

AND here is why I prefer the Egyptian pharaonic matches of David Down from 2001 over the ones which are being promoted now:

Assorted retorts from yahoo boards and elsewhere: Gary Bates' Egyptian Matches Bungle the Carbon Rise
https://assortedretorts.blogspot.com/2024/04/gary-bates-egyptian-matches-bungle.html


Notwithstanding the date of it, it is not an April Fools Prank.

Enjoy!

Hans Georg Lundahl

Tuesday, 13 February 2024

Damien Mackey Seems to Run Out of Arguments


You see, he gives vocational advice. But, before I serve you that, let's get through the arguments we had, shall we?

I

Me to Damien Mackey
2/2/2024 at 2:04 PM
Who's the astute commentator?
"rightly described Creationism as a form of modernism, attempting to reduce Genesis to science."

Is "rightly" your own assessment?

Either way, I disagree.

Here is the answer to that one, from my essay today:

Damien Mackey is, if so, very far from à jour with current Creationist literature. We regard Genesis, not as true systematic science, but as true, chronological, sequence of events history. When I say "history" and not "historiography", some may object that it's not historic research conducted in the way that modern scholars conduct historic research. It's a very ancient historiography. Yes, but history the way that modern scholars conduct historic research is a very modern historiography. History primarily, throughout history, means what certain modern historians would call historiography.

I don't think modern historians are to be confused with scientists, and the ones doing so are not us Creationists, it's the ones pretending we confuse Genesis with science, when in fact we don't.


And here is the essay:
Does Genesis 1 through 11 have an author prior to Moses?

I'm sorry, but the adverb "rightly" makes your status as fellow Catholic moot, and therefore I leave to God either way how you spend your own experience of the feast day. Btw, it's probably already late on Hobart, maybe even tomorrow, from where I write.

Hans Georg Lundahl

II

Damien Mackey to me
2/3/2024 at 9:02 PM
Re: Who's the astute commentator?
I hope your leaders can understand that H-G, because I had difficulty.

Creationists I know believe that the Flood had a tabula rasa effect - nothing whatsoever left of the old world.

The Bible tells differently, the 4 rivers of Genesis, for instance, were still there after the Flood, still at the time of Sirach, still there today.

From the blood of Abel to Zechariah, a sweep of history from the Beginning to the time of Jesus.
Where is the connection, where the continuity, if the Garden of Eden wasn't the same site as Jerusalem?

III

Me to Damien Mackey
2/4/2024 at 2:19 PM
Re: Who's the astute commentator?
"Creationists I know believe that the Flood had a tabula rasa effect - nothing whatsoever left of the old world."

That's a totally different issue. Habermehl is of that school.

It's an overreading into Genesis 6:7 (much as the Protestants overread a mistranslation of Matthew 6:7, against the Rosary).

You cannot make that a definition of Creationists, just because it happens to be a common position.

You also cannot go from that overreading into the definition you made in the paper.

I highly agree with you the location of certain things very much can be reseen in the post-Flood world.

That does not the least imply I cannot agree with them, that a) there was no significant time (less than a full week) before the creation of Adam and Eve; b) the timeline of the Bible in some of the text versions needs to be believed for what happened after Adam was created. People who don't know you would be prone to see your comment here:

"rightly described Creationism as a form of modernism, attempting to reduce Genesis to science"


as implying you deny the full factual historicity of Genesis. For the record, I think Adam was buried (with Eve) where he was created, and that spot is Calvary, which is therefore West of Eden.

Things certainly have been totally buried by the Flood, some of them, like Henoch in Nod would have been buried under the Himalayas. But some things were simply buried in the ground, also "off the face of the earth" for millennia, like the men laying around under lava that's dated to 100 ky or more. And some had already been buried in caves before, like the cannibals of Atapuerca or of the Neanderthal site in Belgium. El Sidrón, by contrast, is where Neanderthals ate mainly pine nuts and other veggies, which is why I don't think Neanderthals need to have been full blood Nephelim.

ANY reading of the text which states that ANY of the things actually happened as described is very likely to be, by "astute observers" stamped as a "modernist heresy, attempting to reduce Genesis to science" .... that's how I know the liturgically conservative modernists (a category where both Ratzinger and Kirill certainly fit).

Abel was probably also killed West of Eden.

If the Holy Sepulchre is East of Calvary, I think Calvary would have been West of Eden, Holy Sepulchre more likely just inside the borders of Eden. Because the Old and the Last Adam were gardeners ...

Did you read Does Genesis 1 through 11 have an author prior to Moses? or did you miss the point by pretending any defense of Creationism involves automatically subscribing to total annihiliation of the pre-Flood world, none of it recovered, none of it traceable as to place?

I don't think Creationism means that any more than Creationism meant believing in a pre-Flood water canopy.

And if it did, it would still not be more than a misreading, rather than what the "astute observer" claimed it to be, "reducing Genesis to science" ...

Hans Georg Lundahl

IV

Damien Mackey to me
2/5/2024 at 7:39 PM
Re: Who's the astute commentator?
Aren't you hedging your bets, H-G, with a global Flood that would have dumped miles of sediment upon the world - but a world that is still accessible to archaeology?

And I would rather take Our Lord's authoritative geographical connection between Jerusalem and Abel than your "probably" west of Eden.

V

Me to Damien Mackey
2/6/2024 at 10:26 AM
Re: Who's the astute commentator?
1) Our Lord never said Abel was killed inside Eden. Genesis 3 actually implies the opposite.

He also doesn't explicitly state that the moral unity (of Himself with Abel, of Pharisees with Cain) is matched by geographic unity.

2) Miles of sediment depends on area. Henoch in Nod East of Eden is probably buried under the Himalayas. The Sima de los Huesos is accessible to archaeology, but it's still in Mountains, where the Flood dumped Sediments:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archaeological_site_of_Atapuerca

The archaeological significance of this part of the province of Burgos became increasingly apparent in the 20th century as the result of the construction of a metre-gauge railway (now disused) through the Atapuerca Mountains. Deep cuttings were made through the karst geology exposing rocks and sediments of features known as Gran Dolina, Galería Elefante and Sima de los Huesos.


See, without those deep cuttings, the Sima de los Huesos would still be covered by huge chunks of sediment. Pre-Flood archaeology also covers El Sidrón, Denisova Cave and some similar ones:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidr%C3%B3n_Cave

The total length of this huge complex is approximately 3,700 m (12,100 ft), which contains a central hall of 200 m (660 ft) length and the Neanderthal fossil site, called the Ossuary Gallery, which is 28 m (92 ft) long and 12 m (39 ft) wide.[2]

In 1994, human remains were found accidentally in the cave. They were initially suspected to be from the Spanish Civil War because Republican fighters used to hide there; however, later analysis shows that the remains actually belong to Neanderthals.[3]


So, if a cave is 12 thousand feet deep, how much sediment does the mountain above contain?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denisova_Cave

Located in Altai Krai, near the border with Altai Republic, both in Russia, the cave is near the village of Chorny Anui (Чёрный Ануй), and some 150 km (93 mi) south of Barnaul, the regional capital. The cave, which is approximately 28 m (92 ft) above the right bank of the Anuy River (a left tributary of the Ob), has formed in upper Silurian limestone and contains a floor area of about 270 m2 (2,900 sq ft). The cave is composed of three galleries. The central chamber, the Main Gallery, contains a floor of 9 m × 11 m (30 ft × 36 ft) with side galleries, the East Gallery and the South Gallery.[9][10] It has been described both as a karst cave[2] and as a sandstone cave.[10]


It would seem that here the Anuy River did the digging, or cutting, or some post-Flood stream did so, otherwise the Denisova cave would have been inaccessible.

Goreham cave on Gibraltar contains no Neanderthals, only Mousterian tools. It contains charcoals dated to after the Flood, but ... nearby you have caves where Neanderthals have actually been found and carbon dated to before my Flood date.

Show me one item of the things I call pre-Flood archaeology, anything containing a Neanderthal or a Denisovan, is as shallow beneath the surface of a plain as Göbekli Tepe is under the "potbelly hill" that gave the site its name. THEN you'll have a case.

Other wager that you might want to check: I have presumed the "very high mountain" on top of which Noah built the Ark was lifted up above the now flattened by the Flood Meseta. If this is true, no Neanderthals or Antecessors / Denisovans / Heidelbergians should be found there, since the present level is one that in pre-Flood times were covered by a no longer extant mountain. My other alternative for where he built the Ark would be in the vicinity of Denisova cave, another site where both Neanderthals and Denisovans were in pre-Flood times, since the eight on the Ark involved were mainly of the Cro-Magnon or Sapiens sapiens race, but included "half breeds" both Neanderthal and Denisovan ancestry. That's why we find those genes today.

By the way, kudos to Wellington's men for defending the last homestead of Noah (if I'm right) against the Revolutionaries.

Hans Georg Lundahl

VI

Damien Mackey to me
2/7/2024 at 4:17 AM
Re: Who's the astute commentator?
Henoch in Nod East of Eden is probably buried under the Himalayas.

I hope that was meant to be funny, H-G.
I always appreciate a good joke.

If it was not a joke, then I think that you might be better occupied doing something you are good at.

VII

Me to Damien Mackey
2/7/2024 at 10:19 AM
Re: Who's the astute commentator?
I am good at spotting people who prefer snobbery over actual argument.

You just made it to that list.

I am also good at spotting people who don't really believe the Bible.

You gave me a reminder you are on that list too.

I am extremely good at spotting people who want censorship in Academia (de facto, none with hard rules they might actually find applied to themselves, of course) and do that by pretending to give vocational advice.

I'm actually a magnet to those. If everyone who had done me that "favour" (in his own view) had done me the favour of finding me a reader, perhaps a publishing company even, I'm not saying I'd have the income to buy something in Beaconsfield, like Chesterton, but it's not all that far off.

Hans Georg Lundahl

VIII

Damien Mackey to me
2/7/2024 at 8:34 PM
Re: Who's the astute commentator?
It's not a case of snobbery or not believing in the Bible, H-G.

Your comment about Cain's city would have to rank as one of the silliest I have ever read. Please don't buy a publishing company, at least for that.

Wishing you all the best for the future,
Damien.

IX

Me to Damien Mackey
2/7/2024 at 9:20 PM
Re: Who's the astute commentator?
The etymology of "silly" is "sælig" ... I am obviously not intending to put all my carreere or success on hold until I happen to please you.

The silliest thing I have seen in this debate is a tendency on one of the parts to decide things by "it's silly" rather than by an argument.

Perhaps you have misunderstood what "miles of sediment" means. It's not like one single flood layer which is equally high everywere, it's like (according to the Flood geologists I have seen) six different layers, all over the world, deposited in unequal intensity and left in place in unequal depth for each as abrasion events would succeed each other.

What would a) get buried rather than swept away in smaller and smaller scraps, and b) get buried so shallow, or have the depth shallowed by abrasions, would be an extreme lottery.

As for a post-Flood rise of the Himalayas, my mathematical model is supported by the fact that all the time from Flood to Babel and some more, no human occupation is visible even in the lower hills.

Care for a look?

Himalayas ... how fast did they rise? · Himalayas, bis ... and Pyrenees · ter · quater · quinquies ... double-checked

And, like for the widening of the Atlantic (more recently), the overall destructivity and violence is less than what many other Flood Geologists (who actually are Geologists), count it as.

Width of the Atlantic

Hans Georg Lundahl

X

Damien Mackey to me
2/8/2024 at 3:29 AM
Re: Who's the astute commentator?
All the best with your writing endeavors.

Monday, 5 February 2024

Challenge to Bishop (if such?) Robert Barron


Before the actual letter exchange:

Assorted retorts from yahoo boards and elsewhere : Bishop Barron Against Rad Trads
https://assortedretorts.blogspot.com/2024/01/bishop-barron-against-rad-trads.html


Was sent to Word on Fire Institute, on the 8.I.2024.

Also, that day, a letter was sent to Dr. Holly Oardway, as associate of that institute, to to Dr. Stephan Borgehammar, friend of myself, but on the other side of the question, to David Palm and to Michael Lofton. If responses are made to my challenge, and if I am free to read them and answer them, you should have more than just these lines on the 5.II.2024.