1 posted on 
04/09/2010 11:35:22 AM PDT by 
lasereye
 
To: lasereye
2 posted on 
04/09/2010 11:38:16 AM PDT by 
rae4palin
(RESIST--REPEAL--IMPEACH)
 
To: GodGunsGuts
I’ll bet you already knew this.
3 posted on 
04/09/2010 11:38:56 AM PDT by 
rae4palin
(RESIST--REPEAL--IMPEACH)
 
To: lasereye
Well at least it makes cloning dinosaurs back into existance that much easier.
4 posted on 
04/09/2010 11:39:04 AM PDT by 
GraceG
 
To: lasereye
5 posted on 
04/09/2010 11:41:10 AM PDT by 
frogjerk
 
To: lasereye
6 posted on 
04/09/2010 11:47:14 AM PDT by 
stinkerpot65
(Global warming is a Marxist lie.)
 
To: lasereye
They did not comment on the trouble these tissues bring to evolution's assumption of deep time, but their silence regarding the "elephant in the room" question of how a "fresh" fossilized salamander could exist after millions of years does not diminish the question's relevance.How would this same muscle tissue remain "fresh" after 6,000 years?
 
7 posted on 
04/09/2010 11:57:48 AM PDT by 
Ol' Dan Tucker
(People should not be afraid of the government. Governement should be afraid of the people)
 
To: lasereye
Well OBVIOUSLY the only thing that makes sense is that the dinosaurs lived within the last 6,000 years contemporaneously with humanity and yet somehow got fossilized >95% into rock, and that starlight from 100 million light years away made the trip in less than 6,000 years!/s
 When you find a dinosaur bone that is BONE and not mineralized fossil you may have found something, but not what you will presume you have found.
10 posted on 
04/09/2010 12:41:05 PM PDT by 
allmendream
(Income is EARNED not distributed.  So how could it be re-distributed?)
 
To: lasereye
I haven’t read one of Brian’s pieces for a while, but I see he’s as deceietful as ever. The soft tissue found is not “meat” in any normal sense of the word; neither is it “fresh.” And I like the way he refers to “a ‘fresh’ fossilized salamander” when the word “fresh” doesn’t appear in his linked reference. Who is he quoting? Himself?
To: lasereye
The opening words in Solzhenitsyns preface to The Gulag Archipelago.
 In 1949 some friends and I came upon a noteworthy news item in Nature, a magazine of the Academy of Sciences. It reported in tiny type that in the course of excavations on the Kolyma River a subterranean ice lens had been discovered which was actually a frozen stream  and in it were found frozen specimens of prehistoric fauna some tens of thousands of years old. Whether fish or salamander, these were preserved in so fresh a state, the scientific correspondent reported, that those present immediately broke open the ice encasing the specimens and devoured them with relish on the spot.
30 posted on 
04/13/2010 7:52:56 AM PDT by 
OldNavyVet
(One trillion days, at 365 days per year,  is 2,739,726,027 years ... almost  3 billion years.)
 
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