Radiohalos - Significant And Exciting Research Results

Two years ago it was reported that polonium (Po) radiohalos were still "a very tiny mystery."1 Since then, extensive research into the geological occurrence and distribution of Po, uranium (U) and thorium (Th) radiohalos has been undertaken as part of the RATE project,2 so now there are some preliminary results to report that are both significant and exciting.

An Australian Fossil Insect Bed Resulting from Cataclysmic Destruction

Because of the apparent frailty of their bodies, and the ability of many of them to fly, insects are thought of being rarely found as fossils.

Polonium Radiohalos: Still "A Very Tiny Mystery"

It is now almost two decades since the then Assistant Chief Geologist
of the US Geological Survey, Dr. G. Brent Dalrymple, described
polonium radiohalos as "a very tiny mystery."1 An expert
geochronologist, Dalrymple was being cross-examined in the Federal

Conflicting "Ages" of Tertiary Basalt and Contained Fossilized Wood, Crinum, Central Queensland, Australia

Published in: Creation Ex Nihilo Technical Journal, volume 14, number 2, 2000, pp. 99-122.

© 2000 Answers in Genesis A. C. N. 010 120 304. All Rights Reserved.

Dubious Radiogenic Pb Places U-Th-Pb Mineral Dating in Doubt

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