D equals1/t
where d is the size of the universe
 ant t is all time.

As "t" goes to infinity, "D" goes to zero.
Either the Universe is extraordinarily small
or time is extraordinarily short-lived.

I would write more but both space and time are
running out, and the boundary of the Universe
is shrinking toward me at many times the speed
of light, so I don't have -------


Sterling K. Webb
-----------------------------------------------------------------
----- Original Message ----- From: "Steve Dunklee" <steve.dunk...@yahoo.com> To: <damoc...@yahoo.com>; <carloselgua...@hotmail.com>; <meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Tuesday, July 27, 2010 2:39 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Dating the age of meteorites


were dopplar shift.rotation of the universe and time dilation from black holes included in the studies you refrer to? And just how fast is the universe rotating? All of these variables create infinite combinations. I once heard how the string theory didnt explain how small particles bounced around while large ones floated smoothly by. Catching some sun on the beach at Galveston I observed large freightors floating smoothly by while small beach balls bounced up and down in the waves. The whole universe is made of fractyls. Its all waves. D equals1/t where d is the size of the universe ant t is all time. Cheers! Steve

On Tue Jul 27th, 2010 2:54 PM EDT Richard Kowalski wrote:

Hi Steve.

Not quite sure where you are getting your age information from, as all except the statement of the biblical calculation is incorrect. The age of the universe and so the age of Hydrogen, is pretty well pinned down.

It is known that the universe is approximately 13,750,000,000 years old, plus or minus 170,000,000 years. Expect that 170 million year uncertainty to continue to become smaller in the coming years.


--
Richard Kowalski
Full Moon Photography
IMCA #1081


--- On Tue, 7/27/10, Steve Dunklee <steve.dunk...@yahoo.com> wrote:

From: Steve Dunklee <steve.dunk...@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Dating the age of meteorites
To: carloselgua...@hotmail.com, meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Date: Tuesday, July 27, 2010, 10:43 AM
there has been reported some new
methods of figuring out the age of meteorites which is
supposed to be more accurate. Bible enthusiests believe the
universe is only 6k years old. Dna combinations and
statistics on actual rates of change would put life at 430
billion years old. Half lives of isotopes might be an
intriguing method to guess at the age of material but our
own experiments with nuclear fusion and fission would tend
to hint that material closer to the sun excited by
radiation which may be 20 or more billion years
old would test by the radiation methods as being younger
than newer material that spent its life way out past pluto.
Since the big bang there are at least 12 vectors necessary
to determine the cosmogenic age of any particle if we
exclude Einstiens equations on time . Adding time as a
variable instead of a constant creates an infinite
possibility of half lives and universes. I have an hydrogen
atom. How old is it? The world may never
 know!

On Tue Jul 27th, 2010 8:09 AM EDT Carl 's wrote:

>
>Hi Jeff,
>
>Amazing photo! The solid grey area is from the Tamdakht
that completely melted? Nice!
>
>Carl2
>
>
>
>Jeff wrote:
>>That's a great Gao specimen Gary. Here's an example
of amazing Tamdakht 'hitch-hikers'!
>http://www.meteorites.com.au/collection/Tamdakht%20H5%205.012g%20(1%20of%205)-2500.jpg




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