The following article is interesting to anyone who is concerned  with
pre-history.  Or geo-history / geology + history.
.
It also provides evidence that so-called "young earth" creationism
is fallacious. If, that is, evidence actually matters to some   people.
.
Other evidence doesn't seem to matter, like mid-Atlantic 
ocean ridges and sea-floor spreading,  with mirror-image
magnetic patterns on either side of the ridge indicating
an orderly process of sea floor expansion over 
millions of years. And there is the history of minerals
like zircon, which point to an era billions of years ago
when many examples of the mineral were formed.
.
Young earthers seem oblivious  to  all of this  evidence,
I guess they don't like geology.
.
The thing abut geology is that it works. What geologists say should
be there, is there, based on empirical models /  geohistorical  models.
And so we have oil, coal, and all kinds of other valuable substances
that can actually be found and recovered. Meanwhile the
predictive value of the young earth hypothesis is zero.
.
.
 
 
 
 
Billy
.
.
.
_________________________________
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Real Clear Politics / Real Clear Science
 
January 17, 2013  
DNA Reconstructs Greenland's Lush  Landscape
By _Anne-Katrine  Faber_ 
(http://www.realclearscience.com/authors/?author=Anne-Katrine+Faber&id=24455) 

Editor's Note: This article was provided by our partner, _ScienceNordic_ 
(http://sciencenordic.com/) . ... 
Imagine standing on a large green meadow scanning the surrounding  
countryside. On the 

horizon you can see a mountain crest rising.  
There’s snow on top of it, but around you, the landscape is green and lush  
with a host of different trees, plants and insects. Does this sound like  
Greenland? 
Not today’s Greenland, no. But finds of fossil DNA from soil residues  
embedded in the ice sheet have previously indicated that this was what 
Greenland 
 looked like more than 400,000 years ago. 
The frozen DNA is not directly accessible, but using ice cores drilled down 
 through the ice sheet, scientists have gained access to the base of the 
ice  sheet. 
Astrid Schmidt is one of the few researchers in the world who works with 
DNA  in ice cores. She recently defended her PhD thesis and currently works as 
a  postdoc at the Centre for GeoGenetics and the Centre for Ice and 
Climate, both  based at Copenhagen University. 
Her work includes determining the species of the DNA that’s buried in the 
ice  cores to gather information about the biology of ancient Greenland. 
This is a job which brings her from the remotest regions of Greenland to 
the  sterile laboratories in Copenhagen and which consists of working at 
temperatures  well below the freezing point. 
New Methods for Fossil DNA 
Fossil DNA is normally found in permafrost because this environment acts as 
a  natural freezer, which preserves the fossil DNA for posterity. 
But unlike permafrost, ice cores have a much lower concentration of genetic 
 material. It used to be difficult to find any DNA at all in the ice, but 
this  has now changed. 
Recent technical advances have enabled researchers like Schmidt to find far 
 more genetic material than only a few years ago. 
”It’s a bit like searching around in a soup using a magnet,” says  
Schmidt. 
“If the magnet isn’t strong, you only find the most frequently occurring  
elements. If, however, you’re using a really strong magnet, you can attract 
more  elements and you get a much broader picture of what the soup consists 
of.” 
Different Plant and Insect Species Identified 
This means that scientists can now use ice cores to learn about past  
biodiversity. 
One of the results of Schmidt’s work is that DNA from a far wider range of  
insect and plant species has now been identified in the ice. 
One might wonder whether tiny amounts of biological material from an ice 
core  measuring only ten centimetres in diameter can give an adequate picture 
of the  entire wildlife in Greenland – a land mass covering an area almost 
ten times the  size of Denmark. 
The explanation lies in the way the ice sheet moves. 
”Since the ice moves slowly across the land, we now believe that the 
genetic  material that’s accumulated at the bottom of the ice cores represents 
the 
 biodiversity in a wider area,” she says. 
Climate Research Could Benefit Too 
Understanding past biodiversity is not only important from a biological and 
 evolutionary perspective. Climate researchers can also benefit from it. 
Certain plant species, the so-called indicator species, only grow under  
highly specific temperature conditions. The existence of a plant species can  
therefore be used as a guideline for the temperature at the time when the 
plant  grew. Scientists are hoping to use this knowledge as a kind of DNA  
thermometer. 
Since DNA is best preserved in cold conditions, the researchers believe 
that  the genetic material they have found at the bottom of the ice cores stems 
from  the period immediately before the climate grew dramatically colder 
and the ice  sheet started to expand. 
In this way, the species tell us something about the climate immediately  
before Greenland became covered with ice, and the age of the DNA is used for  
determining when this happened. 
Covered by Ice for 400,000 Years 
Schmidt’s research has shown that northern Greenland has been covered by 
ice  for longer than previously thought. 
There is a large degree of uncertainty when scientists determine the age of 
 DNA, which is why it’s not easy to come up with a precise age at this 
point. 
However, the results so far indicate that Greenland has been covered by ice 
 at least up to 400,000 years ago and possibly hundreds of thousands of 
years  before that. 
The most surprising result shows that the ice sheet in northern Greenland 
did  not melt away during the _Eemian_ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eemian)  
interglacial period more than 100,000 years ago, which  was the most recent 
period with a warmer climate than today. 
DNA material from mammals such as wolves, deer or bears occur less 
frequently  than material from plant growth, and Schmidt and her colleagues 
have yet 
to find  any such DNA in Greenland. 
Perhaps DNA material from large mammals is buried in the ice, or perhaps it 
 has already degraded.

-- 
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