Age of the Earth
The age of the Earth is generally agreed by scientists to be 4.54 billion years (4.54*102), plus or minus about 1%.[1] This has been deduced through many different lines of study, mainly geological evidence.
In his 1991 book, The Age of the Earth, G. Brent Dalrymple gives two examples for visualizing a time period of 4.54 Ga (billion years):[2]
If a piece of string 2.5 cm long (about an inch) represents one year, for example, then a 183-cm length (about 6 feet) is equivalent to the average lifetime of a person living in the United States. A string representing all of recorded human history would be fully a kilometer long, but a piece representing 4.5 billion years would be 114,280 km [71,010 miles] long!
|
Geological evidence
The main geological evidence is found from lead, as there is assumed to be none of the original crust left due to erosion.
References
- ↑ Talkorigins.org
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Dalrymple GB. (1991) The Age of the Earth. Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804715690. | Google Books preview.