6days
New member
If you mean Stripe..... I thank you!:up:6days seems to have come down with a bad case of Stipe's Syndrome.
If you mean Stripe..... I thank you!:up:6days seems to have come down with a bad case of Stipe's Syndrome.
video of the guy admitting he made up rodhocetus
https://youtu.be/R7e6C6yUqck
1st published in science journal
nebraska man was not on the scale of piltdown man
iron does not keep soft tissue soft
6days seems to have come down with a bad case of Stipe's Syndrome.
not fact, fictionDid you forget about this? Your overzealous attempts to find fraud where there isn't one have been noted
And yes, iron does preserve tissue and keep it soft:
"Researchers used transmission electron microscopy, electron energy loss spectroscopy, micro x-ray diffraction, and Fe micro x-ray absorption near-edge structure capabilities at the ALS to characterize the iron associated with fossil tissues, which occurred primarily as the mineral goethite. They then employed experiments to show that iron, derived from hemoglobin lysate, associated with vessels obtained from surviving ostrich bone, and that incubating bone-derived ostrich blood vessels greatly stabilized these otherwise labile materials against microbial attack and degradation. Synchrotron microprobe techniques were used to compare the iron observed in existing hemoglobin-soaked ostrich vessels with iron associated with dinosaur vessels, and showed similar, but not identical, iron moieties. The chemical speciation of iron in the ostrich tissue was a combination of oxyhaemoglobin and a disordered Fe oxyhydroxide that was referred to as a ‘biogenic-like oxide’, whereas the dinosaur tissues were found to consist of a combination of crystalline goethite and biogenic iron oxyhydroxide. The researchers hypothesize that these represent points on a continuum of biogenic iron to the geological mineral goethite. This mineral is found encapsulated in molecular ‘cages’ in living systems."
http://www-als.lbl.gov/index.php/holding/951-iron-is-the-key-to-preserving-dinosaur-soft-tissue.html
showing a possible mechanism for this unexpected preservation
link
For example, in the Brachylophosaurus canadensis fossil, chemical analysis revealed fragments of proteins that included the amino acid known as asparagine, which we know is unstable in the presence of water. However, in order for Schweitzer’s proposed mechanism to work, water must deliver the iron and other key ingredients to the tissue. If that had actually occurred, you wouldn’t expect to find asparagine in the same tissue. In essence, you can’t have it both ways. If you need water for the preservation of the tissue (and her mechanism does), then you don’t expect to find chemicals that are unstable in water preserved in that same tissue!
For example, in the Brachylophosaurus canadensis fossil, chemical analysis revealed fragments of proteins that included the amino acid known as asparagine, which we know is unstable in the presence of water. However, in order for Schweitzer’s proposed mechanism to work, water must deliver the iron and other key ingredients to the tissue. If that had actually occurred, you wouldn’t expect to find asparagine in the same tissue. In essence, you can’t have it both ways. If you need water for the preservation of the tissue (and her mechanism does), then you don’t expect to find chemicals that are unstable in water preserved in that same tissue!
They both have their "I'm out" phrases (signature phrases that are actually their way of saying "I'm done with this discussion").Stripe's is "Evolutionists hate reading". 6days' phrases are variations on the "Science agrees with God's Word" theme.But they both mean the same thing....."this conversation is over".
Nope.
It is accurate to say that evolutionists hate reading. We respond concisely and accurately your inane questions — which you pose to move attention away from the deficiencies exposed in your religion — yet you act as if nothing has been answered.
they are afraid to carbon-14 date the dinosaur soft tissue
Maybe.Maybe because anything from a dinosaur is older than the 50,000-70,000 year maximum range that carbon dating is effective for? Just a thought that you don't want to acknowledge.
Maybe.
Or maybe they are afraid of what might be found.
Yep. That's totally it. Scientists are the ones who are scared of science. Brilliant
Not scientists; evolutionists.
Excuse me, all scientists who aren't YECs are idiots. That's what you mean, right? Therefore 99.7% of all scientists.
Here's something that is certain: You're an idiot.