ed wrote:
Incidentially, you would all be as attractively knowledgeable as moi had you read the greatest book, which I thoughtfully (yet pointlessly) pointed you toward.
Sorry I missed it, Ed. What book was that?
Just the best damn little book in the whole world....
Genesis Veracity wrote:Ed, if you can prove that all tree rings reflect one year of growth, then you get the big prize.
I am makeing an affermative statement based on examples and data that demonstrate the triangulation of dendrochronology with other dating tools. If you are going to play the game of finding inconsistancies here or there forget it. If you are going to attempt to displace a reasonably well established tool then go at it, the onus is on you.
What an odd god you believe in that not only murders his creations but fools them too.
"The history of science is the record of dead religions"
Wilde
Stan, it's hard to tell, now isn't it? Where were the weather reporters at 500, 1000, 1500, and 2000 B.C. with whose records we could compare notes? Know what I mean? And during the Ice Age, the odds are good that weather patterns were, shall we say, significantly different.
Stan, it's hard to tell, now isn't it? Where were the weather reporters at 500, 1000, 1500, and 2000 B.C. with whose records we could compare notes? Know what I mean? And during the Ice Age, the odds are good that weather patterns were, shall we say, significantly different.
Sorry, Mr. Veracity....
I don't buy it....A year was still a year, n'est-ce pas?
The ice did not cover the entire earth, and the earth revolved around the sun..
Genesis Veracity wrote:Stan, it's hard to tell, now isn't it? Where were the weather reporters at 500, 1000, 1500, and 2000 B.C. with whose records we could compare notes? Know what I mean? And during the Ice Age, the odds are good that weather patterns were, shall we say, significantly different.
No. Wrong.
You do not really know much about dating, do you?
"The history of science is the record of dead religions"
Wilde
It's common sense, if there was a period of time with 10 or 12 very wet spells per year in ancient times, rather than, say, 5 or 6 today, then the dendochronological dating results will be exaggerated, and the climate was different during the Ice Age, don't you think so?