Originally posted by: nismotigerwvu
Theres plenty of evidence to support it staying constant. My biggest worry about the concept is that it measures absolutely minuscule amounts, requiring super accurate instruments and even the smallest error/contamination could shift the calculated date by millions of years.
Originally posted by: Onceler
isin't based on the asumption that carbon 14 is present at the exact same level in the past?
I would think that the amounts would be different for different time periods for various reasons
Originally posted by: johnpombrio
Radioactive dating occurs because living tissue creates and Ionized version of carbon while it is alive. They are not found in nature otherwise. They start to decay ata constant rate after death. I think you can only go back 10-20 years with this techique. quite accurate tho in that range.
Originally posted by: johnpombrio
Radioactive dating occurs because living tissue creates and Ionized version of carbon while it is alive. They are not found in nature otherwise. They start to decay ata constant rate after death. I think you can only go back 10-20 years with this techique. quite accurate tho in that range.
Originally posted by: jagec
Radiometric dating constantly gets recalibrated and cross-calibrated as new papers are published. The cool thing about science is that if you keep good enough records, your work can actually be re-evaluated and gain accuracy as new discoveries are made and better analysis methods come online.
Originally posted by: soccerballtux
also assumes the rate of decay has been the same yes?
Originally posted by: soccerballtux
For instance we know the speed of light is decaying
take a look at what happens when you reverse the rate of decay and interpolate 😱
Originally posted by: Onceler
isin't based on the asumption that carbon 14 is present at the exact same level in the past?
I would think that the amounts would be different for different time periods for various reasons