Frozen Mammoth Baby

It’s called science. You should check it out. Lots of real cool stuff.

interesting enough many scientists believe they could have died out less then 4000 years ago (Nature Magazine, Vol 362)
Just remember the Coelacanth fish was thought to have died 70 million years ago but was found in 1938 alive.

got to love the accuracy of evolutionists :unamused:

With Carbon dating they can figure out when a specific animal died by testing the remains… so just because mammoth’s might have been around as late as 4000 years ago, that doesn’t change the approximate date of death they’ve given to this one.

carbon dating is a estimated guess on plants and animals because they change while they are alive and when they die and what the make up of the atmosphere of the time, many archaeologists don’t agree with it all the time but still its taught as truth.

But not as an absolute truth like in some other places! Big difference! 

Science admits its shortcomings by accepting a paradigm shift if enough tested evidence is available.

Ah, come on, Big Thumb. You mean you’re skeptical that a supreme being sent his only son to earth to be born from a woman, without intercourse, and this son had magical powers, was killed and then came back to life a couple of days later to say hello to his buddies and then went up to Heaven to hang with his dad for a real long time, until he figures it’s time to come back to earth to raise the dead and judge us all?
Open your eyes, man! :smiley:

I don’t believe that was the same Coelacanth

http://www.scienceray.com/Earth-Sciences/Paleontology/The-Coelacanth-The-Fish-That-Didnt-Get-Away.611037

Interesting,Maybe there is a family of mammoths alive somewhere, possibly domesticated by now and tended by Yeti herdspersons.

No, you were right, Bobo. The coelacanth found in 1938 is different from the fossil believed to be 400 million years old.

sciencedaily.com/releases/20 … 152131.htm

Any organism is going to evolve somewhat in 400 mil years.