Claim CC341:
Pollen has been found in Cambrian and Precambrian rocks, particular the Hakatai Shales of the Grand Canyon. By standard evolutionary models, these rocks pre-date the evolution of pollen-bearing plants.Source:
Burdick, C. L. 1966. Microflora of the Grand Canyon.
Creation Research Society Quarterly 3(1): 38-50.
Burdick, C. L. 1972. Progress report on Grand Canyon palynology. Creation Research Society Quarterly 9(1): 25-30.
AIG, 1990. Fossil pollen in Grand Canyon overturns plant evolution. Creation Ex Nihilo 12(1): 38-39. http://www.answersingenesis.org/home/area/Magazines/docs/v12n1_pollen.asp
Burdick, C. L. 1972. Progress report on Grand Canyon palynology. Creation Research Society Quarterly 9(1): 25-30.
AIG, 1990. Fossil pollen in Grand Canyon overturns plant evolution. Creation Ex Nihilo 12(1): 38-39. http://www.answersingenesis.org/home/area/Magazines/docs/v12n1_pollen.asp
Response:
- Most of the palynology work was done by Clifford Burdick, who had
very little knowledge of geological techniques. Creationists
themselves admit that his results come from contamination of old rocks
by recent pollen [Flank 1995; Chadwick 1973; 1981].
- Intrusion of pollen in older rocks is very common. Pollen is
ubiquitous, and its small size allows it to be carried into even small
cracks by water seepage. To verify that pollen is fossil pollen rather
than a contamination, one must look at several factors:
- What color is the pollen? Pollen darkens as it ages. If it is yellow or clear, it is recent.
- Have the rocks been cooked? Vulcanism around the rocks would burn up the pollen.
- Are the pollen grains flattened? Fossil pollens would be flattened as they are buried and compressed.
There is no indication that the out-of-place pollen passes any of these tests. In particular, the Hakatai Shales have lava intrusions, so we would expect any fossil pollen in them to have burned up.
Links:
Morton, Glenn, 1997. Precambrian pollen. http://www.asa3.org/archive/asa/199709/0101.htmlReferences:
- Chadwick, A. V., 1973. Grand Canyon palynology -- a reply. Creation Research Society Quarterly 9: 238.
- Chadwick, A. V., 1981. Precambrian pollen in the Grand Canyon - a re-examination. Origins 8(1): 7-12. http://www.grisda.org/origins/08007.htm
- Flank, Lenny, 1995. Does science discriminate against creationists? http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Hangar/2437/discrim.htm
created 2003-6-27