GetDotted Domains

Viewing Thread:
"How old is the Earth?"

The "General Games Chat" forum, which includes Retro Game Reviews, has been archived and is now read-only. You cannot post here or create a new thread or review on this forum.

Sun 20/01/02 at 21:33
Regular
Posts: 787
About 5 billion, if you agree with Darwin.

Here are some interesting facts I happened across while researching for my physics essay however.....

(Admittedly, this is probably the wrong forum for them, but lets see if anyone here takes a blind bit of notice)


Solar collapse.
Our sun is gradually shrinking at a steady rate. It is occurring fast enough that, as little as 50,000 years ago, the sun would have been so large that our oceans would boil. In far less time in the past (25,000 years or so), all life on earth would have ceased to exist.

Comets.
Comets circle the sun and are assumed to be as old as our solar system. Since they are continually disintegrating, and a number are known to have broken up, evidently all of them self-destruct within a relatively short time period. It is estimated that the comets cannot be over 10,000 years old.

Comet water.
Comets are primarily composed of water. So many small comets strike the earth that, if our planet was billions of years old, our oceans would be filled several times over with water.

Moon dust.
Ultraviolet light changes moon rocks into dust. It had long been predicted that a thick layer of dust (20-60 miles [32-96.5 km], caused by ultraviolet radiation on the moon's 4-billion-year-old surface, must cover the moon's surface. But scientists were astonished to learn that there is not over 2-3 inches [5.08-7.62 cm] of dust—just the amount expected if the moon was only a few thousand years old.

Lunar recession.
The moon is already far too close to the earth. It is now know that, due to tidal friction, it is gradually moving farther away from us. Based on the rate of recession, the moon cannot be very old. If it were even 20,000 to 30,000 years old, it would at some earlier time have been so close—it would have fallen into our planet!

Meteor craters.
Meteor craters are never found in the rock strata! Yet they would be found there, if millions of years were required to lay down that sedimentary strata. Meteor craters always lie close to or on the earth's surface. Thus, all the meteors which have struck the earth—have hit it within the last few thousand years.

Earth rotation.
Because of solar and lunar gravitational drag forces, the spin of the earth (now about 1,000 mph [1,609 kmph]) is gradually slowing down. If our world was billions of years old, it would already have stopped turning. Or, calculating differently, a billion years ago our planet would have been spinning so fast—it would have become a pancake. So, either way, our earth cannot be more than a few thousand years old.

Magnetic field decay.
Earth's magnetic field is slowly, relentlessly lessening. Even 7,000 years ago, the earth would have had a magnetic field 32 times stronger than it is now. Only 20,000 years ago, enough heat would have been generated to liquefy the planet. Therefore, the earth cannot be over 6,000 or 7,000 years old. This is an important matter, affects the entire planet, and has been measured for over 150 years.

Erosion in the ocean.
We do not find the erosion in the ocean floors which ought to be there if the world were millions or billions of years old. There are ragged cliffs and steep mountains. Indeed, the continents should have eroded into the oceans by now.
Sun 20/01/02 at 23:13
Regular
"699 days!"
Posts: 843
VenomByte wrote:
> http://www.pathlights.com/ce_encyclopedia/Index.htm

That's the website. It
> strongly agrees with what the bible says actually, so you might find it
> interesting Ant.

Will come in VERY handy if you ever end up in a scientific
> argument about creation with anyone.

I have a couple of people whop come to my door from time to time. They proclaim 'God's will', so I frequently end up in arguments about religion with them, being an atheist. Thanks VenomByte! :-)
Sun 20/01/02 at 22:00
Regular
"Back For Good"
Posts: 3,673
VenomByte wrote:
>How old is the Earth

bout as old as some of these notables :-D
Sun 20/01/02 at 22:00
Regular
"smile, it's free"
Posts: 6,460
¦¦ lvlägmä Ðrägòón ¦¦ wrote:
> darwin is mostly fiction made into fact, i'd say the earth is very old over 500
> billion years in my estimate.

Based on what? (if anything)

Astronomers currently estimate the universe to be 15 billion years old, I think...
Sun 20/01/02 at 22:00
Posts: 0
Tiltawhirl wrote:
> Neo-Genetic wrote:
> Who's Darwin?

He lives across the Street from Mrs
> Dingle, go down Shrowsbury Lane turn left at the Newsagents straight on he's
> third on the right

Who's Mrs Dingle?
Sun 20/01/02 at 21:58
Regular
"!"£$%^&*()_+"
Posts: 2,148
darwin is mostly fiction made into fact, i'd say the earth is very old over 500 billion years in my estimate.
Sun 20/01/02 at 21:57
Regular
Posts: 21,800
Neo-Genetic wrote:
> Who's Darwin?

He lives across the Street from Mrs Dingle, go down Shrowsbury Lane turn left at the Newsagents straight on he's third on the right
Sun 20/01/02 at 21:56
Regular
"smile, it's free"
Posts: 6,460
http://www.pathlights.com/ce_encyclopedia/Index.htm

That's the website. It strongly agrees with what the bible says actually, so you might find it interesting Ant.

Will come in VERY handy if you ever end up in a scientific argument about creation with anyone.
Sun 20/01/02 at 21:55
Posts: 0
Who's Darwin?
Sun 20/01/02 at 21:52
Regular
"I like cheese"
Posts: 16,918
Ahhh, but I don't agree with Darwin. {:)
Sun 20/01/02 at 21:33
Regular
"smile, it's free"
Posts: 6,460
About 5 billion, if you agree with Darwin.

Here are some interesting facts I happened across while researching for my physics essay however.....

(Admittedly, this is probably the wrong forum for them, but lets see if anyone here takes a blind bit of notice)


Solar collapse.
Our sun is gradually shrinking at a steady rate. It is occurring fast enough that, as little as 50,000 years ago, the sun would have been so large that our oceans would boil. In far less time in the past (25,000 years or so), all life on earth would have ceased to exist.

Comets.
Comets circle the sun and are assumed to be as old as our solar system. Since they are continually disintegrating, and a number are known to have broken up, evidently all of them self-destruct within a relatively short time period. It is estimated that the comets cannot be over 10,000 years old.

Comet water.
Comets are primarily composed of water. So many small comets strike the earth that, if our planet was billions of years old, our oceans would be filled several times over with water.

Moon dust.
Ultraviolet light changes moon rocks into dust. It had long been predicted that a thick layer of dust (20-60 miles [32-96.5 km], caused by ultraviolet radiation on the moon's 4-billion-year-old surface, must cover the moon's surface. But scientists were astonished to learn that there is not over 2-3 inches [5.08-7.62 cm] of dust—just the amount expected if the moon was only a few thousand years old.

Lunar recession.
The moon is already far too close to the earth. It is now know that, due to tidal friction, it is gradually moving farther away from us. Based on the rate of recession, the moon cannot be very old. If it were even 20,000 to 30,000 years old, it would at some earlier time have been so close—it would have fallen into our planet!

Meteor craters.
Meteor craters are never found in the rock strata! Yet they would be found there, if millions of years were required to lay down that sedimentary strata. Meteor craters always lie close to or on the earth's surface. Thus, all the meteors which have struck the earth—have hit it within the last few thousand years.

Earth rotation.
Because of solar and lunar gravitational drag forces, the spin of the earth (now about 1,000 mph [1,609 kmph]) is gradually slowing down. If our world was billions of years old, it would already have stopped turning. Or, calculating differently, a billion years ago our planet would have been spinning so fast—it would have become a pancake. So, either way, our earth cannot be more than a few thousand years old.

Magnetic field decay.
Earth's magnetic field is slowly, relentlessly lessening. Even 7,000 years ago, the earth would have had a magnetic field 32 times stronger than it is now. Only 20,000 years ago, enough heat would have been generated to liquefy the planet. Therefore, the earth cannot be over 6,000 or 7,000 years old. This is an important matter, affects the entire planet, and has been measured for over 150 years.

Erosion in the ocean.
We do not find the erosion in the ocean floors which ought to be there if the world were millions or billions of years old. There are ragged cliffs and steep mountains. Indeed, the continents should have eroded into the oceans by now.

Freeola & GetDotted are rated 5 Stars

Check out some of our customer reviews below:

10/10
Over the years I've become very jaded after many bad experiences with customer services, you have bucked the trend. Polite and efficient from the Freeola team, well done to all involved.
Wonderful...
... and so easy-to-use even for a technophobe like me. I had my website up in a couple of hours. Thank you.
Vivien

View More Reviews

Need some help? Give us a call on 01376 55 60 60

Go to Support Centre

It appears you are using an old browser, as such, some parts of the Freeola and Getdotted site will not work as intended. Using the latest version of your browser, or another browser such as Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, or Opera will provide a better, safer browsing experience for you.