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A
few years ago, some leading creationist geologists and physicists
began a detailed research project into Radioactivity and the
Age of The Earth. This RATE project began as a cooperative
venture between the Institute for Creation Research (ICR),
the Creation Research Society of USA (CRS) and Answers in
Genesis (AiG).1
With
the release of key peer-reviewed papers at the 2003 ICC (International
Conference on Creationism), it is clear that RATE has made
some fantastic progress, with real breakthroughs in this area.
A young age for ‘ancient’ granites
When
physicist Dr Russell Humphreys was still at Sandia National
Laboratories (he now works full-time for ICR), he and Dr John
Baumgardner (still with Los Alamos National Laboratory) were
both convinced that they knew the direction in which to look
for a definitive answer to the puzzle of why radiometric dating
consistently gives ages of millions and billions of years.
Others
had tried to find an answer in geological processes—e.g. the
pattern was caused by the way the magma was emplaced or how
it crystallized. This is indeed the answer in some cases.2,3
But Drs Humphreys and Baumgardner realized that in other cases
there were many independent lines of evidence that suggested
that huge amounts of radioactive decay had indeed taken place.
(These include the variety of elements used in ‘standard’
radioisotope dating, mature uranium radiohalos and fission
track dating.) It would be hard to imagine that geologic processes
alone could explain all these. Rather, there was likely to
be an answer that concerned the nuclear decay processes themselves.
From
the eyewitness testimony of God’s Word, the billions of years
that such vast amounts of radioactive processes would normally
suggest had not taken place. So it was clear that the assumption
of a constant, slow decay process was wrong. There must have
been speeded-up decay, perhaps in a huge burst associated
with Creation Week and/or a separate burst at the time of
the Flood.
There
is now powerful confirmatory evidence that at least one episode
of drastically accelerated decay has indeed been the case,
building on the work of Dr Robert Gentry on helium retention
in zircons. The landmark RATE paper,4 though technical, can
be summarized as follows:
- When
uranium decays to lead, a by-product of this process is
the formation of helium, a very light, inert gas, which
readily escapes from rock.
- Certain
crystals called zircons, obtained from drilling into very
deep granites, contain uranium which has partly decayed
into lead.
- By
measuring the amount of uranium and ‘radiogenic lead’ in
these crystals, one can calculate that, if the decay rate
has been constant, about 1.5 billion years must have passed.
(This is consistent with the geologic ‘age’ assigned to
the granites in which these zircons are found.)
- However,
there is a significant proportion of helium from that ‘1.5
billion years of decay’ still inside the zircons. This is,
at first glance, surprising for long-agers, because of the
ease with which one would expect helium (with its tiny,
light, unreactive atoms) to escape from the spaces within
the crystal structure. There should surely be hardly any
left, because with such a slow buildup, it should be seeping
out continually and not accumulating.
- Drawing
any conclusions from the above depends, of course, on actually
measuring the rate at which helium leaks out of zircons.
This is what one of the RATE papers reports on. The samples
were sent (without any hint that it was a creationist project)
to a world-class expert on helium diffusion from minerals
to measure these rates. The consistent answer: the helium
does indeed seep out quickly over a wide range of temperatures.
In fact, the results show that because of all the helium
still in the zircons, these crystals (and since this is
Precambrian basement granite, by implication the whole earth)
could not be older than 14,000 years. In other words, in
only a few thousand years, 1.5 billion years’ worth (at
today’s rates) of radioactive decay has taken place. Interestingly,
the data have since been refined and updated to give a date
of 5,680 (± 2,000) years.
The paper
looks at the various avenues a long-ager might take by which
to wriggle out of these powerful implications, but there seems
to be little hope for them unless they can show that the techniques
used to obtain the results were seriously flawed.
More
surprises on radiocarbon
Another
dramatic breakthrough concerns radiocarbon. It’s long been
known that radiocarbon (i.e. carbon-14, or 14C) keeps popping
up reliably in samples (of coal, oil, gas, etc.) which are
supposed to be ‘millions of years’ old. However, with the
short half-life of 14C it should decay to zero in only some
tens of thousands of years at the most.5 For instance, AiG
has, over the years, commissioned and funded the radiocarbon
testing of a number of wood samples from ‘old’ sites (e.g.
samples with Jurassic fossils, samples inside Triassic sandstone,
and samples burnt by Tertiary basalt) and these were published
(by then staff geologist Dr Andrew Snelling) in Creation magazine
and TJ—the in-depth journal of creation. In each case, with
contamination eliminated, the result has been in the thousands
of years, i.e. 14C was present when it ‘shouldn’t have been’.
These results encouraged the rest of the RATE team to investigate
14C further, building on the literature reviews of creationist
physician Dr Paul Giem.
In another
very important paper, scientists from the RATE group summarized
the pertinent facts and presented further experimental data.6
The bottom line is that virtually all biological specimens,
no matter how ‘old’ they are supposed to be, show measurable
14C levels. This effectively limits the age of all buried
biota to less than (at most) 250,000 years. (When one takes
into account the probability that before the Flood the ratio
of radioactive to ‘normal’ carbon was much lower,7 the calculated
age comes right down into the biblical ‘ballpark’.) Interestingly,
specimens which appear to definitely be pre-Flood seem to
have 14C present, too, and importantly, these cluster around
a lower relative amount of 14C. This suggests that some 14C
was primordial (existing from the very beginning), and not
produced by cosmic rays—thus limiting the age of the entire
earth to only a few thousand years.
This appears
to have been somewhat spectacularly supported when Dr Baumgardner
sent five diamonds to be analyzed for 14C. It was the first
time this had been attempted, and the answer came back positive—14C
was present. The diamonds, formed deep inside the earth, are
assumed by evolutionists to be over a billion years old. Nevertheless
they contained radioactive carbon, even though, if the billion-year
age were correct, they ‘shouldn’t have’.
This is
exceptionally striking evidence, because a diamond has remarkably
strong lattice bonds (that’s why it’s the hardest substance
known), so subsequent atmospheric or biological contamination
should not find its way into the interior. The diamonds’ carbon-dated
‘age’ of about 58,000 years is thus an upper limit for the
age of the whole earth. Again, this is entirely consistent
with helium diffusion results reported above, which indicate
the upper limit is in fact substantially less.8,9
14C workers
have no real answer to this problem, namely that all the ‘vast-age’
specimens they measure still have 14C. Labelling this detectable
14C with such words as ‘contamination’ and ‘background’ is
completely unhelpful in explaining its source, as the RATE
group’s careful analyses and discussions have shown. But it
is no problem or mystery at all if the uniformitarian/long-age
assumptions are laid to one side and the real history of the
world, given in Scripture, is taken seriously. The
14C is there, quite simply, because it hasn’t had time to
decay yet.
The
world just isn’t that old!
The 14C
results are an independent but powerful confirmation of the
stunning helium-diffusion results. It looks like 2003 was
a bad year for megachronophiles (lovers of long ages), but
a good year for lovers of the Word of God.
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