Thanks, Philip. I think. Most interesting. I would still like to know if
these new formations pictured are basically of the same composition as
those in most Texas caves. If so, gee, we may have been misled about the
period of time that it took for the really large stalagmites to attain
their size.

Fritz

 

  _____  

From: Philip L Moss [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, July 17, 2007 11:56 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Texascavers] [Bat "Caught" by Stalactite] - warning
Ediger-length diatribe

 

OK, I'll play along.  Calcium carbonate formations can grow at very
rapid rates.  Did I miss something?  I thought that this was old news to
cavers.  Haven't we all seen examples of calcite deposition over man
made objects in caves?  I am amused at the website,
http://www.bible.ca/tracks/speleotherms-stalagmites-stalactites.htm, use
of commercial cave guides as the source of their "scientific"
information.  There are quite a few discrepancies between commercial
cave guide talks and reality.  The age of formations is often one of the
lesser ones, in my experience.  Some commercial caves are more focused
on entertainment than on education, and understandably so.

 

Caves are the generally the best preserving environments for
paleontological material.  Calcite one of the mechanisms as is burial by
clastic sediment.  I fail to see the mystery here or how this is linked
(other than wishful thinking) to the age of the earth.  Geologically,
caves are very young features and are not much of an indication of the
age of the earth.

 

It kind of reminds me of a geography professor who, in addition to
telling us that valleys don't form in granite, had written his own text
(printed by that prestigious producer of high-end text books, Kinko's)
in which he pointed out that carbon 14 to carbon 12 ratios have not been
constant through earth's history.  He then leapt to the conclusion that
radiocarbon dating doesn't work and then made the very impressive leap
to the conclusion that the earth is not as old as those profane
geologists say it is.  The minor leap is not supported because more
complex equations can take into account the varying ratios among carbon
isotopes.  The major leap is truly impressive because carbon dating has
nothing to do with the age of the earth.  I may not current, but the
last best estimate of the age of the earth is 4.6 billion years which is
almost inconceivably older than anything that can be radiocarbon dated
at less than 50,000 years.  The age of the earth has not been estimated
based on caves, their contents, or radiocarbon dating.  If it were, it
would be laughed at by everyone.  Five orders of magnitude of time is
way too much to extrapolate.

 

A little refresher for those who have forgotten or were unfortunate
enough to not be exposed.  Darwin's theory of evolution disturbed quite
of few people at the time of its publication.  List of what reasons you
will.  Lord Kelvin (see Kelvin is Lord! - http://zapatopi.net/kelvin/ -
Only Kelvin can preserve you from entropy), who studied thermodynamics
and is one of the great historical figures of science, recognized that
evolution was a viable mechanism.  However, he believed that the earth
was too young for evolution to have taken place.

 

This is despite James Hutton's (the discoverer of the angular
unconformity - now there is something that indicates a significant
minimum age of the earth) statement that the earth "has no semblance of
a beginning and no prospect of an end".  And the work of Charles Lyell.
Too bad these folks are not common topics around caver camps.

 

He brought his scientific discipline to bear on the issue.  His approach
was to measure the amount of heat absorbed by the earth from the sun.
He assumed that the earth had begun in a molten state and that it is
still cooling.  He also made measurements of heat flow.  He made such
measurements for 15 years and published his results in 1860, if memory
serves me correctly.  I don't know if that influenced Pete Lindsley's
entry into caving after the Civil War or not.  However, we all have had
plenty of time to familiarize ourselves with his work.

 

In any case, Kelvin had set out to prove that the earth was young.  He
assumed that the only two sources of heat on earth were residual heat
from a molten state and heat from the sun.  He also assumed that life
could not exist on earth if the earth were molten.  He took his 15 years
of data, plugged it into thermodynamic equations with which he was quite
familiar and that had been demonstrated to represent heat flux well, and
back calculated to a molten state.  He got an answer that was
dissatisfying to everyone.  It was too short for geologic models (James
Hutton, Charles Lyell) or for biologists (Charles Darwin and  Alfred
Russel Wallace) and it was too long for creationists.  His equation
produced an age of the earth of 100 million years.  Kelvin did not make
any significant mathematical errors and his measurements have not been
questioned.  Yet his approach only yielded a little less than 1% of the
age of the earth.  He used a scientific approach to come at the problem
from a different direction than geologists and biologists had and
produced an interesting result.

 

In the late 1800's, the first person to receive two Nobel prizes in
science (who is worth looking up as this person is atypical is another
important way, not just because of the receipt of two Nobels), made a
discovery that was later found to account for the missing heat in
Kelvin's assumptions.  Now all of you have had the benefit of a modern
education that has built on the cumulative knowledge starting at least
with the Renaissance and will immediate realize what the source of over
99% of the heat on earth is that Kelvin was unable to include since it
hadn't yet been discovered.

 

Please keep in mind that there is a temperature scale named after
Kelvin, because Kelvin recognized that relativism is a bad thing and
leads people astray.  He recognized that there is absolute temperature.
Those who have succumbed to temptation and strayed from the path of
righteousness and into the decadent and perverse use of relative
temperatures such as Fahrenheit and Celsius, will have a harder time
recognizing just how hot the earth is and how little difference in
temperature the sun makes here at the surface of the earth.

 

Now for those who are still scratching your heads about the source of
approximately 99% of the heat on earth - if you can't recognize a simple
thing like a heat source that provides 99% of the heat on your planet,
perhaps you might have a little trouble recognizing evolution, which
plays just as large a role in your lives.

 

Some people measure success in dollars.  The most profitable businesses
today find their product using the tools of evolution.  Which are the
most profitable companies?  Oil companies.  Invertebrate paleontology is
a key tool in oil exploration.  Now if we can just get the educational
system worldwide to quit teaching evolution, then we can finally rid
ourselves of our oil dependance.

 

Disclaimer: I am a professional geologist and a skeptic.  My
understanding of the world around me has been influenced by falsifiable
theories, including the theory of evolution and the theory of gravity.
I reserve the right to accept revised theories when there is conflicting
or better data.  

 

If falsifiability cannot be applied to an idea, model, or theory, then
it is a matter of faith, not science and should be treated as such.
This is a simple test and is safe for home use by people of all ages who
are compos mentis.

 

Basic education should be learned in schools, from text books,
scientific literature, and interacting with people who do research
(including helping them).  It should not be expected from a list server
or the Internet in general.

 

 

Philip L. Moss
[email protected]

 

On Tue, 17 Jul 2007 10:17:56 -0500 "Fritz Holt"
<[email protected]> writes:

        I am waiting for a knowledgeable geologist or someone to tell us
that these formations are not formed by the same minerals or in the same
manner in which cave formations are formed. I'm sure that there must be
an explanation why these formations grew at such a rapid rate.

        Fritz with questions.

         

         

 

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