Did Scientists Revive 46,000-Year-Old Roundworms? | thebereancall.org

TBC Staff

Deep in Siberian permafrost lurk microscopic roundworms frozen in time, just waiting for a thaw so they can emerge to infect a host and continue their life cycle. These parasitic creatures are known as nematodes, and they have the ability to “freeze” (reduce their metabolic rate to extremely low levels) for seemingly long periods of time. But are they really emerging from a 46,000-year state of cryptobiosis, as the media is reporting?

Well, the ages of these creatures were determined by “radiocarbon dating plant material also found in the permafrost.” So the worms themselves weren’t dated; the material they were buried in was dated. But radiocarbon dating is based on a stack of unprovable assumptions.

As we explain more fully in an article on our website, for radiocarbon dating (also called carbon-14 dating) to be considered accurate, scientists must assume the following:

  1. The production rate of carbon-14 has always been the same in the past as now.
  2. The atmosphere has had the same carbon-14 concentration in the past as now.
  3. The biosphere (the places on earth where organisms live) has always had the same overall carbon-14 concentration as the atmosphere due to the rapid transfer of carbon-14 atoms from the atmosphere to the biosphere.

None of these assumptions can be proven! And it’s worth noting that carbon-14 shouldn’t exist in detectable levels beyond 50,000–100,000 years, and yet carbon-14 has been detected in fossils, coal, and even diamonds—all of which evolutionists assume to be millions or even billions of years old. So, radiocarbon dating is not consistent with an evolutionary worldview (which is exactly what we’d expect since we know the earth is only thousands of years old, based on the eyewitness testimony of the perfect Creator).

Now, when these nematodes were “defrosted” from the permafrost, they began wiggling around, eating, and even reproducing. They have short lifespans, merely a month or two, so the original, supposedly 46,000-year-old nematodes have since died, but their offspring are surviving nicely.

It really does strain credulity to believe that a creature could be “frozen” for 46,000 years only to emerge perfectly normal after all those millennia. But in a biblical worldview, we understand that the permafrost isn’t tens of thousands of years old. At the very most, it was formed during the post-flood ice age (generated by the flood) just a few thousand years ago.

So, no—scientists didn’t revive 46,000-year-old creatures. These microscopic little worms were “frozen in time” a few thousand years ago at the most and have used their God-given ability of cryptobiosis to survive until today.

https://answersingenesis.org/geology/carbon-14/did-scientists-revive-46000-year-old-roundworms/