How Little Lies Go A Long Way: Henry Morris and the Missing Potassium
By whose authority? For all our lives, we have been trained to appeal to authority, and that’s not necessarily a bad thing. We learned to trust our teachers and parents, […]
By whose authority? For all our lives, we have been trained to appeal to authority, and that’s not necessarily a bad thing. We learned to trust our teachers and parents, […]
Guest post by David MacMillan One of the great things about being home schooled was the way every experience could become a learning opportunity. We were always ready to investigate […]
I want to take a moment to clarify what I said in a recent post, Andrew Snelling concedes, radiometric dating of meteorites is solid, because I stumbled upon some confusion by […]
Figure 18 from Snelling (2014), illustrating the frequency of isochron ages obtained from the Allende CV3 carbonaceous chondrite meteorite via six independent radioisotope systems (color coded, in legend). Note the strong […]
If you inquire of your favorite search engine as to the ‘age of the Earth’, one number should dominate your results: 4.54 billion years. During the recent debate, Ken Ham […]