(October 14, 2010 at 6:58 pm)Statler Waldorf Wrote: Different isochrons yielding different ages for the same rock is a common occurance. The final age is determined by which layer of Strata the sample was found in. This is basic basic stuff here. Decay rates have changed, everyone knows that.
You just made the same assertion that I pointed out you offered no evidence for the first time. Repeating yourself doesn't help make you right.
Do you have any evidence that decay rates have changed over time?
What do you say of the overwhelming majority dates gathered from isochron dating confirming radiometric parallel examples?
By what mechanism has the decay rate of Uranium changed from 1 every 6,000 years to 1 every 4.5 billion years?
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