Originally posted by: PrinceofWands
Of course, you could just play the young earth card and claim that your religion tells you the earth is only 6000 years old, so the question is nonesense.![]()
Originally posted by: sheik124
November 10, 10:11:40 AM 29755 BC
I think
Originally posted by: HappyPuppy
I didn't realize the Gregorian Calendar existed back then.
Originally posted by: ruffilb
Originally posted by: HappyPuppy
I didn't realize the Gregorian Calendar existed back then.
Correct answer.![]()
Originally posted by: HappyPuppy
I didn't realize the Gregorian Calendar existed back then.
Originally posted by: Hyperlite
i'm getting in the ballpark of September/October of the year 29704 BC. can anyone confirm? i just want to make sure i am doing my math right...
:thumbsup:
Originally posted by: NiKeFiDO
Originally posted by: HappyPuppy
I didn't realize the Gregorian Calendar existed back then.
ftw
Originally posted by: livinlovin
Originally posted by: ruffilb
Originally posted by: HappyPuppy
I didn't realize the Gregorian Calendar existed back then.
Correct answer.![]()
Well it does now, so an answer using the calendar of the day would be a perfectly good answer, we use years to determine the age of the earth. Same idea.
Converting 1 trillion seconds to years I get 31,709.79 years. 2005 minus 31,709.79 = - 29704.79 = 29704.79 B.C. (B.C.E. for you P.C.) I have no idea how to figure out the month, day, that makes my brain explode.
