Re: evidences against subduction theory



Timberwoof <timberwoof.spam@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Irrelevant.

That's the usual response to any data that shows problems with the EE
hypotheses.

Read the post, then answer.


The question is not whether gravity changed or not, it is
whether gravity decreased or increased along with expansion.

An increase is more likely.

So. If Earths gravity increased, how come dinosaur bones were so big? IF
gravity was less, the bones would have been more spindly.

The bones were big because they were big :-)

Bones of geometrically similar animals of equal density
would have strength indicators proportional to (body
mass)-0.33, so big dinosaurs can be expected to have bigger bones.

Anyway, the point is that if gravity was higher they would definitively
not live. That rules out density decrease.

If Earth's gravity increased, that would mean the mass increased. How
did that happen?

You have a very short memory.

--
Florian

"Tout est au mieux dans le meilleur des mondes possibles"
Voltaire vs Leibniz (1-0)
.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: evidences against subduction theory
    ... Earth's mass could easily have increased? ... - density decreases => gravity decreased ... giant animals would have had thinner bones than one would expect. ...
    (sci.geo.geology)
  • Re: evidences against subduction theory
    ... If Earths gravity increased, how come dinosaur bones were so big? ... currently living animals, they show remarkable uniformity in both bone ... That rules out density decrease. ...
    (sci.geo.geology)
  • Re: evidences against subduction theory
    ... Earth's mass could easily have increased? ... - density decreases => gravity decreased ... giant animals would have had thinner bones than one would expect. ...
    (sci.geo.geology)
  • Re: evidences against subduction theory
    ... If Earths gravity increased, how come dinosaur bones were so big? ... Bones of geometrically similar animals of equal density ... Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com> http://www.timberwoof.com ...
    (sci.geo.geology)
  • Spacesickness and rickets
    ... One would be calcium loss from bones. ... How do bones affected by calcium loss without gravity fail? ... pelvis deforming to be smaller. ...
    (rec.arts.sf.science)

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