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Page 7 of 8 (88 Articles)
The Oklo natural reactors in Precambrian rocks, Gabon, Africa
The nuclear reactor that began without human intervention
by Eugene Chaffin
The fatal flaw with radioactive dating methods
When you peel away the mystery it’s obvious that the dates are not objectively measured.
by Tas Walker
Dating of “oldest pottery” from China is based on assumptions
The evidence is consistent with biblical history.
by Tas Walker
Age of the earth
Data from many different sources point to a young age for the cosmos; not billions of years.
by Don Batten
Helium evidence for a young world continues to confound critics
Russ Humphreys responds to six years of criticism of one part of the creationist research initiative into Radioisotopes and the Age of the Earth (RATE).
by Russell Humphreys
How potassium-argon dating works
Why it has tended to reinforce what geologists already believed.
by Tas Walker
Swedish trees older than the universe?
A closer look at a claim about the world’s oldest trees—allegedly older than the biblical date of creation.
by Carl Wieland
Is Young-Earth Creationism a heresy?
An anticreationist attacks biblical creation as heresy, although biblical heresy is an oxymoron. The response also refutes a common argument about the absence of short-lived isotopes, beloved of atheists and progressive creationists, and answers some alleged biblical contradictions.
by Jonathan Sarfati
Evolutionist debater fails to understand young-earth arguments
A young supporter asks some questions about young-earth evidence raised by an evolutionary debater. The response points out some of the evolutionist’s misunderstandings and even outright errors, and the role of axioms in the debate.
by Jonathan Sarfati
Does Carbon Dating Prove Millions of Years?
Does Carbon Dating Prove Millions of Years?
by Joel Tay and Scott Gillis
Tree ring dating (dendrochronology)
by Don Batten, Ph.D.
New record of polonium radiohalos, Stone Mountain granite, Georgia (USA)
A study of Stone Mountain granite samples raises more questions than answers.
by Mark Armitage