[meteorite-list] Observations on Age of Carolina Bays
From: oxytropidoceras at cox.net <oxytropidoceras_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sun, 15 Nov 2009 14:46:30 -0500 Message-ID: <20091115144630.GAX72.971698.imail_at_eastrmwml44> As I will discuss in a paper that I am preparing, Carolina Bays are not at all difficult to date in terms of their age relative to the Younger Dryas as documented in a number of published, peer- reviewed papers and specific Cultural Resource Management reports. There is a huge amount of information available about either the age or relative age of the Carolina Bays to be found by carefully and persistently digging through the large number of publications about them and the geomorphology of the Atlantic coastal plain. 1. Radiocarbon dates, which are all minimum dates indicating when ground water conditions allowed the preservation of organic material within them. All the basal dates tells a person is the last time that a bay was permanently filled with water because of rising groundwater table, which is greatly influenced by rises and falls in eustatic sea level. Despite the fact that the radiocarbon dates are only minimum dates, they clearly demonstrate that the Carolina Bays predate the Younger Dryas event. 2. optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating is now a well established and proven dating method, which gives credible dates for the age of these landforms. A person might argued for mxing of older and younger sand, except that Dr. Ivester, whom I personally discussed this matter with on the GSA 2008 Meeting sand mantle, biomantle, mima mound field trip told me that he did not find the anomalies in the raw data for his dates that such mixing would create. Also, a person can always use single-grain OSL dating to unequivocally test for such mixing. Given that Dr. Ivester is a very experienced Quaternary geologist, the claim he dated the wrong material, in my opinion is the type of lame excuse that I hear from Young Earth creationists when the data refutes what they want to believe is the truth. If a person is going to make this claim, they need to back it up with hard and well-documented facts for it to be credible in any manner at all. 3. the pollen records from several Carolina Bays clearly go back to the last Glacial Maximum and in one bay, back to Oxygen Isotope Stage 5a. In many more Carolina Bays, the paleoenvironmental records start during full glacial conditions, several thousands of years before the hypothesized Younger Dryas event. Common sense and basic stratigraphic principles dictate that the Carolina Bays containing these records existed before any hypothesized Younger Dryas events as it is physically impossible for any sort of exterrestrial event / impact to create craters thousands of years before it occurs. It is impossible for mixing of sediment to have produced these records as the paleoenvironmental records recovered from Carolina Bays correlate precisely in time and nature to palynological records from non-Carolina Bay lakes and swamps in the same area as a Carolina Bay. 4. Cross-cutting relationships between well dated fluvial terraces (lacking Carolina Bays) cut and inset into older terraces and the Carolina Bays they exhibit establish the minimum age of Carolina Bays. Similarly the superposition dunes fields, which formed during the Late Glacial Maximum and lacking Carolina Bays, upon Carolina Bays that they partial bury, establish the preYounger Dryas age of the Carolina Bays. Both cross-cutting relationships and superposition is documented in great detail by LIDAR DEMs available for large parts of the Atlantic Coast. 5. Stratified archaeological sites demonstrates how Carolina Bays have been modified after the Younger Dryas. Carolina Bays on restricted government reservations indicate how historic argriculture and urban development have modified Carolina Bays during the last few decades by comparison. 6. All the presence of hypothesized impactites filling the Carolina Bays indicates is that preexisting Carolina Bays was filled by material from this hypothesized impact. The presence of hypothetical impactites within the loose soils of coastal plain sands forming the rim of Carolina Bays indicate is that bioturbation mixed material falling on the surface of into the loose sand forming the rims. The churning of surface materials deep into thick sandy epipedons is a well documented and well known process. 7. In the northern extent of the distribution of Carolina Bays, their orientation varies by over 120 degrees and based upon cross-cutting relationships and great differences in the degree of degradation of their rims strong indication of multiple generations of Carolina Bays having formed at greatly different time. The claim by Firestone that both the Carolina Bays and playa and other lakes point at a central point is based him having overlooked a significant amount of orientation data that both subtly and grossly contradicts and ultimately refutes this claim of his. 8. Although it is still in the realm of speculation, there appears to be evidence that indicates that the Carolina Bays in the Midlothian area are much older than the typical Carolina Bays that are found on Pleistocene coast-wise terraces. In my opinion, As far as the Carolina Bays are concerned, they are a nothing more than a time-consuming red herring of gigantic proportions. Even if the Carolina Bays are impact features of some sort, they clearly are much too old be connected in anyway with a Younger Dryas event. I am not going into references and figures because I am pulling this all together into a paper that I am working and will submit to a journal that I know will both welcome it and have it rigerously peer-reviewed. Before submitting it, I will also have two or three select people review it. Yours, Paul H. Received on Sun 15 Nov 2009 02:46:30 PM PST |
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