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Author | Topic: Amino Acid Dating | |||||||||||||||||||
dwise1 Member Posts: 6077 Joined: Member Rating: 7.1 |
Don't date the Aminos. Nothing good could ever come from it. You racemizatist!!!
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dwise1 Member Posts: 6077 Joined: Member Rating: 7.1 |
Can somebody please basically tell me why Jeff Bada made an error in his methodology for dating California skeletons using Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) back in 1983? He was the guy that came with a new way of dating fossils - Amino Acid dating. Here is the article:
No webpage found at provided URL: http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v312/n5993/pdf/312442a0.pdf With all due respect ( fully intended in an absolutely non-Woody Allen manner), faith24 is posing a very serious and earnest question. One which I am not equiped to answer. Please, someone who is able to answer his question, do so.
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Coyote Member (Idle past 2364 days) Posts: 6117 Joined: |
I heard that there are other method which overlap this one - Amino Acid Racemization? Do you know the relationship between this one and why it must depend on other one, such as C-14?
The two techniques are entirely independent, neither depending on the other. I do a lot of radiocarbon dating in my work as an archaeologist. Bada tried to get folks interested in amino acid dating going back into the 70s, but the method never really worked as the Taylor article I cited above showed. I don't know any western US archaeologists doing amino acid dating at all any more. We do a lot of radiocarbon dating. As far as overlap, they do overlap in the time periods they cover, but that is about all. Religious belief does not constitute scientific evidence, nor does it convey scientific knowledge.
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Coyote Member (Idle past 2364 days) Posts: 6117 Joined: |
Can somebody please basically tell me why Jeff Bada made an error in his methodology for dating California skeletons using Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) back in 1983? He was the guy that came with a new way of dating fossils - Amino Acid dating. Here is the article: Bada did not use AMS (a form of radiocarbon dating). He used amino acid racemization. He dated eleven early California skeletons and came up with very old dates. Others disputed those dates. Finally, Taylor dated those eleven skeletons using AMS dating and established that they were not nearly as old as Bada claimed. These younger ages were more in keeping with the archaeological data. I am not sure of the exact reasons for the errors in these AAR dates, but most archaeologists don't bother with AAR now, using the radiocarbon method instead, as that has been shown to be reliable. ================ Add: Faith, have I answered your questions? Edited by Coyote, : No reason given. Religious belief does not constitute scientific evidence, nor does it convey scientific knowledge.
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faith24 Junior Member (Idle past 3702 days) Posts: 27 Joined: |
quote: Right, i see now. Bada's view were incorrect and the errors are rather large up to 50% which is fairly narrow. But in general, i heard that there are better dating methods out there that can confirm this one? Do you happen to know? Thanks!
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Dr Adequate Member Posts: 16113 Joined: |
You racemizatist!!! It seems that opinion on this subject is polarized.
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Coyote Member (Idle past 2364 days) Posts: 6117 Joined: |
Right, i see now. Bada's view were incorrect and the errors are rather large up to 50% which is fairly narrow. But in general, i heard that there are better dating methods out there that can confirm this one? Do you happen to know? Thanks! Confirm which one? AAR is prone to errors and none of the archaeologists I know use it. It has not been confirmed by radiocarbon dating, as the Taylor article I cited above shows. (I have a copy of the article at the office, and have met the author on a number of occasions.) Radiocarbon dating is used all the time and is able to be both cross-checked and calibrated by comparison to things with annular events, such as tree-rings, glacial varves, some corals, etc. That lets you count directly back into the past, year by year, then radiocarbon date, for example, every tenth tree ring to see how close the radiocarbon dates are to the tree ring (assumed to be accurate to within a year or so). This also lets you calibrate (correct) the radiocarbon dates, as atmospheric fluctuations cause small errors. Religious belief does not constitute scientific evidence, nor does it convey scientific knowledge.
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faith24 Junior Member (Idle past 3702 days) Posts: 27 Joined: |
quote: Well i heard that this method does support other dating methodologies that are sound. If you have many different methods of measuring that work on independent principles, and they all come out to values within error bounds of each other, then this indicator that they are sound methods. Is that true? hrmm...
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Coyote Member (Idle past 2364 days) Posts: 6117 Joined: |
Well i heard that this method does support other dating methodologies that are sound. If you have many different methods of measuring that work on independent principles, and they all come out to values within error bounds of each other, then this indicator that they are sound methods. Is that true? hrmm...
If a variety of different methods all point to the same answers then that would tend to confirm those answers. With dating, we have a lot of methods that can be used, and if they all point to the same approximate date that both confirms that date and supports the accuracy of each of the dating methods. For dating skeletal remains in the past 10,000+ year range, I am not aware that amino acid racemization is very accurate. It certainly is not used by archaeologists that I know, and we want the most accurate dating tools we can find. You might check the Taylor articles. One is online:
Here The other is available in American Antiquity, but not online free that I know of. Here is the citation again: Taylor, R.E., et al., Major Revisions in the Pleistocene Age Assignments for North American Human Skeletons by C-14 Accelerator Mass Spectrometry: None Older Than 11,000 C-14 Years B.P. American Antiquity, Vol. 50, No. 1, 1983, pp. 136-140. Edited by Coyote, : Format Religious belief does not constitute scientific evidence, nor does it convey scientific knowledge.
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Coragyps Member (Idle past 992 days) Posts: 5553 From: Snyder, Texas, USA Joined: |
Hi, Faith24, and welcome aboard!
I'm no expert on racemization dating, but I am a chemist, and I can conceive of several things that might interfere with getting accurate dates from the method. Moisture content of the material being dated might be very important, and it could be pretty tricky to construct a history of that. Carbon-14 dating won't have this problem, as C-14 and C-12 will be affected essentially equally by anything water would do to them. Any slight difference in reaction rate they had could be corrected for by looking at the carbon-13 ratio with carbon-12 - C-13 is non-radioactive so it won't gradually disappear like C-14 does.
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Coragyps Member (Idle past 992 days) Posts: 5553 From: Snyder, Texas, USA Joined: |
I do suscribe to Nature, but they want $32 for me to access an article of this age. I'm feeling too cheap today to do it......
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Coyote Member (Idle past 2364 days) Posts: 6117 Joined: |
I think I have figured out one of the problems with Bada's amino acid dating. The abstract from the Nature article provided some details and reminded me of others. (I have a lot of these original articles at the office, but I haven't dug them out. I even included a Bada article on AAR dating in a publication I edited in the late '70s, along with a rebuttal in a subsequent publication I edited. Haven't looked at those in years!)
Bada calibrated his method using a 1960s radiocarbon date on the Laguna Skull, dating bone collagen. That radiocarbon date was obtained by UCLA (their number UCLA-1233A) and was 171501470. A lot of these early bone dates were flawed, as they had not yet determined which materials to extract from bones to get usable dates. This has since been straightened out. The Laguna skull was radiocarbon dated later using more advanced technology and returned an age less than a third of that figure. That fits with the archaeological context as well. But this erroneous date that Bada used to calibrate his method threw everything off by a huge amount, and all the early amino acid results he obtained were worthless. Taylor's AMS dating of many of the skulls that had returned early amino acid dates (some going back 70,000 years) showed that they were generally closer to 5,000 years. That pretty much ended the archaeological use of amino acid dating for west coast bone samples. Hope this helps. Religious belief does not constitute scientific evidence, nor does it convey scientific knowledge. |
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jar Member (Idle past 97 days) Posts: 34140 From: Texas!! Joined: |
Actually, this whole thread is just another example of how reliable the Scientific Method is.
The important point is revision and testing. Particularly when new methods are developed, new tools and procedures tried, it is not at all unusual for there to be errors. Fortunately, science almost never relies on one methodology, one sample, one experiment or experimenter. This really illustrates the Scientific method. Both the early Radio-carbon dating and AAR gave readings that conflicted with OTHER independent dating methods. The Scientific Method issue then became "Why?" It was a success of the SM, it showed that something was wrong. It could have been AAR or Radio-carbon dating or any of the other methods used. So the methods were all tested, procedures revised; it is called learning. Anyone so limited that they can only spell a word one way is severely handicapped! |
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faith24 Junior Member (Idle past 3702 days) Posts: 27 Joined: |
quote: Sorry, i am new to this that's why i keep asking you questions. Can you tell me two things: 1. What are the other methods that can be used to support each other?2. How do they support to each other? 3. What are the assumptions/interpretation being used? Thanks for the article, i enjoy reading it.
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Coyote Member (Idle past 2364 days) Posts: 6117 Joined: |
My experience is with younger dating methods, so that's what I will respond to. RAZD has an excellent thread around here somewhere on age correlations and how all the different methods complement and confirm one another.
1. What are the other methods that can be used to support each other?
This depends on the age. I use radiocarbon dating a lot, and that can be cross-checked with tree-ring dating (and calibration), as well as by dating historical materials of known ages (materials from Egyptian tombs, for example). Those sorts of tests can establish the accuracy of radiocarbon dating beyond any reasonable doubt. With radiocarbon dating, one important thing an archaeologists should do is learn the tricks and pitfalls. For example, date single pieces of material. If you date a bunch of loose shell or charcoal from different proveniences, you no longer know what your date is telling you. Another thing: get a lot of dates if you can. That way you can establish the age of your site much more accurately. On a recent large project I obtained 31 radiocarbon dates. Another caution: if you date marine organisms you have to correct your dates for upwelling (old carbon sequestered in deep water). That can change your date by several hundred years, but there have been a lot of studies done and we can correct for this error. One way of doing this is dating shell and charcoal from the exact same provenience and comparing the ages. You can also cross-check radiocarbon dating with any of several other methods, including thermoluminescence, paleomagnetism, etc.
2. How do they support to each other? See RAZD's thread.
3. What are the assumptions/interpretation being used? For radiocarbon dating the primary assumption is that the decay constant is a constant rather than a variable. We do not assume the levels of radiocarbon in the atmosphere, but calibrate against the tree-ring data to correct for atmospheric fluctuations. This lets us eliminate one potential source of error. We also correct for isotopic fractionation. C14, C13, and C12 are slightly different in weight, and are taken up into the food chain differently. We correct for this to increase the accuracy of the final date. Here are some good links:ReligiousTolerance.org Carbon-14 Dating (C-14): Beliefs of New-Earth Creationists Religious belief does not constitute scientific evidence, nor does it convey scientific knowledge.
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