03 August, 02:16
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Laritha Savage
@Laritha
04 August, 01:49
In response Lydia Fahsholtz to her Publication
Where were the big stones before.
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04 August, 03:13
In response Laritha Savage to her Publication
Obama walks past a stone that looks fabricated.
Could the stones all be faked?
Could the stones all be faked?
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no they are real they they did some work on them in the past to excavate and to make sure it wont tip over over 1mil go and see them...they go back before people knew how to write
08:19 PM - Aug 12, 2023
In response Lydia Fahsholtz to her Publication
Only people mentioned by reapermyer in this post can reply
12 August, 08:34
In response reaper myer to his Publication
Would carbon dating work on these artifacts?
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reaper myer
@reapermyer
12 August, 08:43
In response Lydia Fahsholtz to her Publication
no not the stones they would have to base the time on artifacts found in it or by it
https://historylists.org/a...
https://historylists.org/a...
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reaper myer
@reapermyer
12 August, 08:47
In response Lydia Fahsholtz to her Publication
Geologists do not use carbon-based radiometric dating to determine the age of rocks. Carbon dating only works for objects that are younger than about 50,000 years, and most rocks of interest are older than that. Carbon dating is used by archeologists to date trees, plants, and animal remains; as well as human artifacts made from wood and leather; because these items are generally younger than 50,000 years. Carbon is found in different forms in the environment – mainly in the stable form of carbon-12 and the unstable form of carbon-14. Over time, carbon-14 decays radioactively and turns into nitrogen. A living organism takes in both carbon-12 and carbon-14 from the environment in the same relative proportion that they existed naturally. Once the organism dies, it stops replenishing its carbon supply, and the total carbon-14 content in the organism slowly disappears. Scientists can determine how long ago an organism died by measuring how much carbon-14 is left relative to the carbon-12.
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