Good post Stuu. ....or, at least some of it is.
Often what happens though is that results that don't fit *within the expected range are dismissed as contaminated...or as an outlier....or an anomaly. *Some of the papers mention the difficulty in obtaining a good sample... IOW; a good sample is one that is consistent with the reseachers expected results. *Sometimes the assigned date is effected by the researchers hopes his find is significant, (insisting its a new species) so he, or she, is 'needing' a certain dating result. *And...as in the case of 1470 skull which was in 150 pieces, the reconstruction favored a more human like appearance. Over the course of time, *many have questioned the initial portrayal, and many now say 1470 appears similar to*australopithecines.*
There you go again, cherry-picking the outliers.
There is no difference between excluding a single dating outlier because it doesn't conform to the trend established by other dating results, and excluding a single dating outlier because it doesn't conform to trends in the morphology of the fossils associated with the particular dated strata. The overwhelming body of evidence that already establishes, for example, that bunny rabbits won't be found in Cambrian rock is itself just as valid for determining dating errors as are other dating data.
That's not to say a suspected Cambrian bunny rabbit femur would not be investigated further; these people aren't dogmatic or dishonest like creationists are.
Real science has mechanisms for correcting the errors induced by any individual who wants to promote a particular view by cherry-picking data. Peer review usually does the trick, and science is not dogmatic but always provisional so is permanently open to new evidence. But creationism has no correction mechanisms, and in fact doesn't even have any theories.
I note, by the way, that few creationists who question the reliability of dating techniques ever claim that the real ages of dated strata could in fact be much
older than stated. In general, dating techniques claim accuracies of ±0.5%.
Your hilarious AiG material refers to 'evolutionary geologists'. Do they mean to say 'paleontologists'? Can you translate this term from creationist speak into something a real scientist would recognise?
Stuart