[meteorite-list] Dating the age of meteorites

Michael Fowler mqfowler at mac.com
Tue Jul 27 18:26:12 EDT 2010


Thanks Sterling,

You said it far more succinctly than I ever could have, that Steve's gibberish makes no sense.

Mike Fowler
Chicago 


> > 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.dunklee at yahoo.com> 
> To: <damoclid at yahoo.com>; <carloselguapo1 at hotmail.com>; 
> <meteorite-list at 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 



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