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June 6, 2024 • 28 mins
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(00:00):
Just forty nine dollars. We wouldlove you to sponsor a child in this
conversation we're having with the camplus Careradiothon with Open Door Mission. We learned
this week's Dinosaur Week over at camp, so kids are playing, learning about
dinosaurs, building dinosaurs in different waysand learning an awful lot having it an

(00:21):
awful lot of fun and we wantyou to give. So here's the ways
you can get right now. Youcan call four O two eight nine eight
hope four O two eight nine eighthope, h ope, or if you
want the numbers there four oh twoeight nine eight four six seven three four
O two eight nine eight four sixseven three. You can also go online
opendoor mission dot org opendoor mission dotorg. We would love you to have

(00:46):
the opportunity to help out kids whoare less fortunate have an opportunity to go
and be a part of this amazingcamp with our radiothon today. Also match
this hour from our friends at BooneBrothers Roofing, their commercial roofing and sheet
metal company providing steep and flat roofingapplications and Boone Brothers works with all of

(01:07):
major manufacturers and have served the Midwestfor over fifty years. They have locations
here in Omaha, in Kansas City, Leavenworth, and Sioux City. Definitely
want to do that again. Ifyou want to give opendoor mission dot org
or call four oh two eight nineeight four six seven three. We'll be
catching up. Our friend Kandas willbe popping in in an hour from now.

(01:29):
Our buddy Chip Maxwell from retire Smartis going to be popping in as
well. Matt Case sitting alongside HappyThursday. Matt, what are you drinking
today? Happy Thursday? That is? I got some water over there.
It used to have Red Power Aidin it, but now it's just water.
You're just recycling. Yeah, okay, who's your favorite? What's your
favorite dinosaur? By the way,it's Dinosaur Week. I figured i'd ask

(01:52):
you what your favorite dinosaur is,not to put you on the spot.
That's a tough question. Well,do you have a favorite dinosaur? I
like the Trice era thoms. Whyjust because they're cool. But what makes
them cool the horns and the waythey look, and they're cool, and
that's basically it. I grew upwhen I was a kid. You know,
when you first get into the dinosaurthing, which, by the way,
can we talk about science for asecond. The fact that we know

(02:15):
or think we know about what dinosaurslook like that existed in roam the Earth
sixty five million years ago or longer. Think about how long a million years
is? Dude? Can you canyou do that for me? Can you
like, how long since? Whatyear is it? It's well, it's
twenty twenty four, right, Okay, so it's twenty twenty four two and

(02:35):
twenty four years ago? Was zero? Right? Or is that one BC?
Was there a year zero? Orwas it just one BC? Do
you think they called it zero?I don't know. I don't know how
they kept track of that stuff backthen. But that's the crazy thing,
right, This stuff like we talkabout like the ancient Greeks and the ancient
Romans and the ancient Egyptians, thisstuff is just a few thousand years ago.

(02:58):
I'm talking about a million years ago. Okay, So think about how
long that feels? Like things likeput yourself back in ancient Egypt five thousand
years ago, okay? And Imean we like, like our species is
just kind of evolving to the pointof like, hey, we were recognizable
humans, right right, that's fivethousand years ago. You know how many

(03:19):
five thousand year spans make up onemillion years? Like a bunch, like
so many, so many, Ican't even count that high. Twenty twenty
of those would get you to liketwenty five yeah, yeah, twenty five
thousand year spans will get you toone hundred thousand, and then you need
ten of thoseesh to get to amillion. And now take that time sixty

(03:43):
five the most recent dinosaurs roamed theEarth sixty five million years ago, and
we are led to believe that weknow exactly what the heck they look like
and how they behaved. How canwe be sure of any of this?
Am I am I conspiracy theory overhere? Thinking that I think they made
some of these up, Like theankylosaurus. Do you really think the ankylosaurce

(04:05):
looked and acted that way? Youknow, we have any do we have
any evidence that that's legitimate? Thatlike exactly this guy, this guy's wandering
around. He looks like an alligatorand he's got a big old club on
his tail, and he just usesthat to like ward off like potential predators,
right, even though he's a predatorhimself. He's he he goes after

(04:25):
some people the ankilosaurus, or takethe tonsilitis for example, the tonsilitis.
Yeah, what about Tonsilitis, that'sa dinosaur. No it's not, it's
not. No, that's what Ihad that made them scrub those nasty little
things off my throat. When Iwas eight. Oh, I didn't listen
very well in school. Cheers toyou, Matt. I have my coffee

(04:49):
concoction. By the way, that'swhat I'm drinking. Cheers to everybody out
there. Mmm, it's good.Okay. When I was a kid,
like seven years old, it wasStegosaurus. It was Stegosaurus. Stegosaurus again,
how we know this guy looked andacted this way? I have no

(05:10):
idea. Oh that is a cooldinosaur. He's he's got these plates on
his back to help protect him fromabove because he's, you know, he's
a plant eater, gentle guy,and he's on all fours. He's not
like a t rex, which ora velociraptor, which is just running around
on two legs. So he's onall fours. He's a little bit slower,
he's big. He kind of probablyshaped more like a rhinoceros than he

(05:34):
is anything else. But he's gotthese plates on his back to protect him
from anybody trying to eat him fromabove. And then he's got these spikes
on his tail that he can useas a weapon to help protect himself.
Again, he's a plant eater.He doesn't need that for a meat eating
but he's a low lying plant eater. Right. The more I say this

(05:54):
out loud, the more I justthink they made all this up and we
just like, are we take itas fact? Oh yeah, we found
some bone here. Let's figure outexactly what this guy might actually look like.
And this is what they came upwith. You know, now that
we're talking about it out loud,let me think about it. You think
about science in general. I mean, they just got lucky with all of
these inventions that actually worked, Likethe car, that was just pure luck.

(06:16):
Let's face it, what do theyknow what a scientists know nothing.
It wasn't a scientist I made that, it was an engineer. Combustion,
what's that? I've got some combustionevery time I fart. That's not combustion,
that's flatulence. I didn't listen wellin school. That's scary. Tonsilitis,
you know, wreaking havoc In theTriassic Period, no, I'm like,

(06:41):
seriously, though, come on,did you I read? Okay,
we popped up on my Facebook memories. I read a book a couple of
years ago by David mccola. It'scalled The Right Brothers. You want to
know what it's about, Well,it ain't about the Wrong Brothers. I
know that, you guess it.It's about the Right Brothers and it's about
their from bicycle repairmen to guys whocreated the first airplane, motorized airplane.

(07:06):
The book is incredibly fascinating. Everysingle thing that they experimented with that failed
gave them an idea to like eventuallymade something that worked, and it's experimentation.
I just want to know what didwe experiment on, Like, did
they try it's like a puzzle.Did they try to put those bones together
in a different way to just like, yeah, it probably doesn't look right,

(07:28):
you know what I mean? Youfind those fossils and you're like,
hmmm, wonder what this guy lookedlike, and then you try like seven
different ways and you're like, youknow what, this is probably the most
likely scenario, and then we justlike we just accepted all as fact.
I don't know, I just Iwant somebody to be able to tell me
that the dinosaurs that we learned aboutare like one hundred percent legit. And
I'm happy for those kids that OpenDoor Mission. You know, they're hanging

(07:51):
out at camp this week, playingaround learning about dinosaurs. I'm a big
fan of dinosaurs. I just what'sstopping those kids from just making their own
dinosaur and calling good that's what Ido. I was like, you can't
tell me that this thing that Imade isn't a dinosaur. I have as
much evidence as to this as beinga real dinosaur as anything that you guys
have for the last couple hundred years. Well how about this, how about

(08:16):
this for a show open how aboutwe call a paleontologist and investigate how much
work they've done to get to theknowledge base that they have. Paleontologist,
those are the guys that come upwith this stuff. Huh, what a
job? Give me that gig I'lltake. I'll take one hundred grand a
year to do that gig. Flyme around the world. I get to
look in a bunch of pits thatarchaeologists are digging up. The archaeologists aren't

(08:39):
able to tell me exactly what thisstuff is, so they just give it
to me. I inspected, andI'm like, yeah, that was the
femur of this little known thing calledthe terodactyl. Yeah. Yeah, I
learned more about dinosaurs from land beforetime than I did from any paleontologist,
for the record, and for therecord, that might be the problem here.
It's two eighteen. Well, ifyou've got memories of dinosaurs love to

(09:01):
hear from you, you can callit four oh two five five eight eleven
ten. Four oh two five fiveeight Wait, sorry, four oh two
five five eight eleven ten. That'sthe number to call. If you want
to be a part of our conversation. You can also email me the email
Emory at kfab dot com. Thereason I'm stuttering right now is robson an

(09:22):
email and it's like, there Igo, still writing BC on my checks
and it's a cartoon from the yearzero. Oh darn it, that darn
BC. Anyway, all right,we're gonna get the d day here momentarily
as well and share some memories andthoughts about that. So stick around.
We got a lot to talk abouttoday on news radio eleven ten KFAB.

(09:46):
Emory songa on news Radio eleven ten, ok FAB. Thanks to Whitney,
Matthew, David Scott, Pamela,Jim, Cheryl, Ronald and then supporting
ten kids each. A kid isforty nine dollars. It's it and we

(10:09):
have matching from our friends at booneBrothers, the roofers here in town,
Joseph, Tim and Colleen. Tenkids each. Fantastic, fantastic, keep
them comming again, opendoor mission dotorg to give four h two eight nine
eight four six seventy three. Youcan give that way too. Matt Case

(10:30):
made me come to a realization.We're talking about camp, and the kids
at camp are learning about dinosaurs thisweek. And now, you know,
I've kind of like walked myself intoa corner here of like I'm not so
sure that the dinosaurs are what wethought they were. They should just create
their own dinosaurs. Found out thatthat's what actually the kids are doing.
A lot of them are just youknow, I'm creating what they're you know,
like ideal dinosaur characteristics. I mean, that's what I do. Let's

(10:52):
optimize a guy and just say helives seventy million years ago. Well,
Colleen's on our phone line of fourtwo, five, five, eight eleven
ten, all right, Colleen,what's going on? Well, you said
the stegosaurus is your favorite dinosaur.Did I get that correct? Yeah?
I mean I guess I haven't thoughtabout it or take inventory on it.
I felt like they were my favoritewhen I was growing up, so I'll
stick with that. Yeah, Ithink I think they are pretty cool.

(11:13):
Do you know what the name ofthe tail is, that spiky bits on
the tail, the spiky bits,No, I couldn't tell you. It's
called a sagamizer. Do you knowwhy it's called a sagamizer? No,
I don't. This is actually avery true story. It's because Gary Larson
in the Far Side comic Once upona Time showed Caveman doing a PowerPoint presentation

(11:37):
saying, then this is called asagamizer, named after the late researcher sag
Simmons. I was never named beforethat. And the scientists, I don't
know. So the Far Side,the Far Side has had a legitimate effect
on our science, is what you'resaying to me, Kaleen. That is
correct. Hilarious those guys they figuredit out. What a great cartoon.

(11:58):
All right, Colleen, thank you? Record Serrapdots is my favorite. Oh
there you go. Man, that'sright. Yeah, there you go,
Team trites Eratops. Okay, soundsgood clean, Thanks so much for the
call. Trevor emailed in here yougo. I'm starting to hear it now,
Matt, this is I went toofar. Trevor says, hey,
imory, based on physical characteristics fromfossil evidence, science can conjecture what behaviors

(12:22):
dinosaurs could potentially have had. Ankylosaurusis it? He says, ankylosaurs is?
Is it an ankylosaur? Or Ithought it was ankylosaurus. Hmmm?
Can you do some recon on that? Yeah? He says ankulosaurs were herbivore
based on their beaks. Oh,okay. They've also discovered an ankulosaur with

(12:43):
fossilized skin, which is super rare. There's a picture online. Look it
up. What skin fossilized from tensof millions of years ago skin? I'm
seeing an ankylosaurus. Okay, soI'm right. Plural version is Ankliosauri or

(13:03):
ankleiosauruses Akilo ankylo And I'm putting thel the ros a kilo and Kilo ankylo
ankylosaurus. Anyway, it's okay.I'm not going to judge I'm looking at
this. I guess yeah. Imean it's pretty well preserved. It's a
weird looking guy, and he doeshave the club tail, that is,

(13:26):
I don't know that it's weird.Well, Trevor goes on and he says,
uh, plus, science is constantlychanging. That's the whole point.
When better evidence comes in, sciencechanges its position. Palaeontology has changed a
lot over time, and it's continuingto change as more data and specimens come
in. You're a naturalist, youshould know this. Just easing, keep
learning, Okay, Trevor, thankyou for the email. I guess when

(13:52):
did they change their mind on thedinosaurs? Like when did when was the
first ankylosaurus? Like like ankylos discovery? Nineteen oh six, nineteen oh six,
Matt, you're telling me that ittook until nineteen oh six, like
one hundred and not even one hundredtwenty years ago, one hundred and eighteen

(14:13):
years ago. An American Museum ofNatural History expedition led by American paleontologist Barnum
Brown. Now that's a turn ofthe century name. Barnum Brown. He
discovered the type of specimen Ankulosaurus magnaventris in the Hell Creek Formation near Gilbert
Creek, Montana. That was howwe've learned about the Ankulosaurus. And I

(14:37):
guess I just have to ask ittook sixty five million years for anybody to
be like, oh, look there'sbones here. People have been finding bones
since for the history of humanity.They just you know it. They wore
them on their neck and did wardanceswith them. Instead of like, hey,
I wonder what this belonged to,somebody was like, hey, look

(14:58):
this is how this fits together.And you know that's like, oh,
there's more than one. There's morethan one here, Let's keep digging.
And then they found a bunch ofthem. You got to get up to
Ashfall fossil beds and you'll see that, and I mean, that'll change your
perspective. Trevor apologizes for the typo. He says he's working. He made
a typo. No problem, It'sokay, Trevor. I just you know,
it's fair game. You know,I just wanted to make sure I

(15:18):
was saying it correctly. Thang Arnieemails and it says when I was a
kid, you either team t Rexor team tri Sarah toops. Maybe that's
why I was a segasaurus. Guy, I just don't like I just don't
like following the crowd. I reallydon't I like to think outside the box,
sue me. Two twenty nine.All right, we got plenty more
where this came from. If youwant to talk dinosaurs, I suppose four

(15:39):
two, five, five eight eleventen. Also, please give for our
friends at open Door Mission today opendoorMission dot org to give just forty nine
dollars helps provide camps plus safe shelter, nutritious meals, in quality care for
a child, instability for the entirefamily. And there's a match this hour
from Boone Brothers, which is acommercial roofing and sheet metal company. You're

(16:00):
in Omaha. Please please feel likeif you can give, if you have
the ability to give, we'd loveto see you given, and we'll give
you a shout out here on theradio as well. Again, you can
give at opendoor Mission dot org orfour oh two eight nine eight four six
seven three more on the way onnews radio eleven ten kfab Amrie songa on

(16:22):
news radio Okadi Fab. We wantyou to give because this is just a
forty nine dollars gift per kid.So forty nine dollars from you gets a
kid camp, plus a shelter,nutritious meals, and quality care for a

(16:45):
child, and it could give helpgivet stability to an entire family. And
this week the kids that are atOpen Door Mission Camp are enjoying dinosaurs.
Now more on the dinosaurs, becausewe have started a thing, the dinosaurs
thing. You started this by askingme whan I fare dinosaur was, and
I had to think about it.Honestly thought that was one of the most
innocuous, innocent and fun questions Icould ask a person. Had no idea

(17:07):
that all these conspiracy theories would becoming from that. But before we get
back into that, I wanted tothink the people that have been giving already
during our show, and we're reallyhappy to hear this. Thank you to
Deanna, Janice Scott, Cheryl PatriciaBenjamin and Mark Carroll Michael. They both

(17:27):
they all three did support a twokids, Mitchell, Chris going in with
four kids, and then another Chriswith five kids. That's a gift of
two hundred and fifty dollars. It'sjust incredible. You might be wondering how
you can give. You want tobe a part of this list. You
want me to shout out your name. You want to feel like you've really
done something good for a child anda family in need. Well opendoor mission

(17:49):
dot org. Opendoor mission dot orgis a good way to give. That
is opendoor mission dot org. Oryou can call this number four oh two
eight nine eight four six seven threefour two eight nine eight four six seven
three and you'll have an opportunity togive in. Just forty nine dollars helps

(18:10):
a child out. And this hourour friends at boone Brothers they are helping
us out as well by matching alldonations up to five thousand dollars. They
are, of course a commercial roofingand sheet metal company providing steep and flat
roofing applications, and they work withmajor manufacturers and have served the Midwest for
over fifty years with locations in Omaha, Kansas City, Levenworth, and Twox

(18:33):
City. Okay, got some emailshere on the dinosaurs here, Matt,
are you ready? Wisconsin? Joshemails in and says, having kids,
I watch shows with them, don'twe all? I mean I don't have
kids, but when I'm around kids, I mean you throw on the kids
shows like Paw Patrol Beard of PawPatrol. Sure blue Eye is if everybody
likes Blue Eye right for example?Right, Well, to all dinosaurs out

(18:57):
there, there's a show called Egg. There's a show that exists called Dino
Trucks. Have you watched dinald Trucks. It's dinosaurs and trucks. That's a
good combo. It's a mix betweendinosaurs and construction equipment. I as a
grown adult a child at heart,love the show and you should try it.
So I'm looking up Dino Trucks justto get a load of this quite

(19:21):
literally, because the dinosaurs are constructionequipment. This is made by DreamWorks,
by the way, and apparently there'sseventy eight episodes of this thing out there
on Netflix, So there you go. It's the plot. Here's the plot.
A prehistoric world set in the Mecazoicera like mechanic populated by hybrid reptile

(19:45):
tools called rep tools and hybrid dinosaurtrucks called dino trucks. Two best friends,
thy Rucks, who was a goodtiny frannosaurs Rucks and Revitt, who
was a rotillian reptool, must teamup with other inhabitants of the world to
defend their community and their work froman evil TA trucks named destrucks, Dino

(20:11):
trucks and reptools share a symbiotic relationship. For example, TIE provides Revit with
safety, shelter, and security,and Revit in turn fixes and maintains TIE
when needed. This sounds fantastic.Yeah, that sounds so great. I
am I'm glad there are people inthis world that create stuff like this,
not just for the kids, butfor society in general. It's pretty awesome.

(20:36):
More emails. Stevens says archaeologists paleontologistsbelieve the myth of the dragon comes
from people finding the skulls of dinosaurs. I guess that would make sense,
right, like people, you know, it's like the myth of the dragon,
like dragons existed, but it reallywas a dinosaur if you think about
it, kind of makes sense.Find a giant school with giant teeth,

(20:56):
and then imagination sets in. I'mI'm I track tracking with that. Kim
emails it and says my favorite dinosaurwas the brontosaurus because of the Sinclair gas
station and Fred Flintstone cartoons. Yeah, the Brontosaurus. Long neck guy says
it might be the dinosaurs are notmillions of years old but only thousands of
years old. Saw a video ofCreation Science that reported there were preserved dinosaur

(21:19):
skin and a dry climate of Montana. Yeah, that's your Ankylosaurus that I
was just looking up that they somebodyelse said that they found the skin.
The title of the videos is GenesisHistory. It's fabulous thinking outside the box
of evolution, which is only taughtin public schools. Possible that older scientists
had the wrong theory of their age. If you ask me, the dinosaurs

(21:40):
miss Noah's Ark and perished in theworldwide flood. There is a joke where
two dinosaurs are talking to each otherand one said, darn was that it
was the day of the day thatthe boat was supposed to set off.
Ha, could you imagine being thatguy? Ah, man, we missed
the boat. Terror Dakos probably couldhave got there. Yeah yeah, I
feel like they could have figured thatthing out. It's funny. Hey uh,

(22:02):
but again this is my overarching pointhere. It's so long ago,
like who's to say exactly, likehow have we been able to pare down
what sixty five million years and justknow, oh yeah, brachy a Saurus
seventy five or sixty five million yearsthat's how long that guy has been gone.

(22:22):
Carbon dating? Is that how thatworks? They have carbon in their
bones? Yeah? What else wassixty five million years old that they could
compare it to? I don't know, dirt. Yeah, that doesn't make
sense. Dirt does have a bunchof carbon in it. Two, I
don't know. It's weird anyway,dinosaurs, it's pretty funny. Also,

(22:42):
you're going to enjoy this. Eric. He mailed in and said, Bill
Lambier was a slee stack, Aslee stack. Yeah, look up slee
stack. Bill Lambier was a sleevestack, you know, Bill Ambier,
right sure, Piston center, Yeah, yeah, look up slee stack from
the Land of the Law. Ohthe green leather guys, lizard alien guys.

(23:04):
Just out out of context. Ericsays Bill amber was a sleeve stack,
all right, noted. All right, we'll continue and we'll chat with
our friend Kansas. He's going toslide back in here to talk more about
the KFAB camp and care at Radiodon which we want you to give forty
nine dollars is all it takes tohelp a child. We are going to
give you more information on that comingout momentarily. Right now, it's two

(23:25):
forty seven on news radio eleven tenkfab. Emale Songer. We'll be right
back right after I get done talkingon news radio eleven ten kfab. Candace
is back in the studio and sheis, you know, driving the ship
here today. And can you kindof explain to people who might be just
tuning in exactly what we're raising moneyfor today. You know, it is

(23:49):
all about kids going to camp,and you know, emory about camplus care
is so much more than the stabilityfor the children. And yes we have
a lot of fun, but wealso deal with some things like emotions and
behavior, and we do a lotaround the tutoring program because so many of
our children are behind their peers.Our kids get actually a Boys and Girls

(24:10):
Club membership for the whole year,which is so important to us at the
opened our mission. When fifty percentof our children are victims of domestic violence,
we don't know when they're going toleave us, and so knowing that
they have a place to escape andhave refuge when maybe things aren't going so
great in the home, it justgives us a warm feeling. You know.
It's all about providing opportunity for thewhole family. And so when our
kids are at camp, moms anddads can actually take advantage of maybe ged

(24:34):
our computer classes, vocational training,can look for work or even a home.
And so that's why we call itnow camp plus care. If people
are thinking, well, what aboutkids to camp? Yeah, so camp
plus care is what we're doing.And people can give by going to opendoor
mission dot org, opendoor mission dotorg or call in at four oh two
eight nine eight four six seven three. That is four O two eight nine

(24:56):
eight for six seven three. Andwe've had people throughout the first hour of
our show giving a lot, andwe've been keeping track because we do have
a matchup to five thousand dollars withtheir friends at boone Brothers. And we
have some more people in the lastbit that we tell you Theodore, Linda,
Margaret Kelly and Don thank you forsponsoring a child and Tim sponsored two
children, made one hundred dollars giftand we just want to say thank you

(25:18):
in advance. We want to endwell today we have a greater need than
ever before. We're seeing new facesand I know a lot of people are
saying, Candice, why on socialmedia do you guys have overflow going on.
Yeah, we have people sleeping onthe mats. It's not inclement weather,
not triple digit weather, not highhumidity, And I just think it's
a reflection of what's going on inthe community right now. We just do

(25:40):
not have enough beds for everyone,but at least we have them inside the
walls of the Open Door Mission andtheir basic needs are being met. And
that's what you're doing here at theOpen Do our mission. When you're supporting
our Camp plus Care, it's somuch more than just camp Yeah. Camp
plus Care forty nine dollars gifts helpsprovide Camp plus safe shelter, nutritious meals,
and quality care for a child atalmost Opendoormission dot org Opendoor Mission dot

(26:03):
org. And again you can callin to give as well at four oh
two eight nine eight four six seventhree. Thanks Candice for the update.
We'll be chatting with you again herein the next little bit. But we
appreciate everybody for listening and wanting togive, and thanks to the Boone Brothers
for helping this hour with the matchand that's what we like to see.
Matt case. Yeah, a couplemore people who have sent in comments.

(26:30):
And here's one to think about.Trit sarah thops is the model T version
of the rhinoceros. Hmm, Idon't know. I feel like the rhinoceros
is, you know, pared downquite a bit from Tri sarahtops, don't
you think? Yeah, it's Iwould I would think that as well.
The Model T you know, that'salmost like the Dodge supercharger. Right version
of the rhinoceros. Ainoceros has onehorn, the try sarah toops had three.

(26:55):
It also had eight hundred teeth.Eight hundred teeth. Yeah, yeah,
I would not mess around with thetriceratops. Okay, I do want
to ride one? Ride one?Yeah, they're extinct. Well, I'm
not saying it's going to happen.I just think it'd be cool. Did
you say that you found a waythat they can confirm that they know how
long ago the dinosaurs lived? Yeah, just a quick Google search for me.

(27:18):
Here. How do we know dinosaursexisted millions of years ago? Radiometric
dating of volcanic layers above or belowthe fossils, or by comparisons to similar
rocks and fossils of known ages.But we don't know what other fossils of
known ages, they would have dugup and radio radiometric or radiometry radiometry radiometry,

(27:41):
that's the right way to say that. The measurement of energy or power
in electromagnetic radiation fields or light.How would they figure that out? In
nineteen oh six? They studied alot, Yeah, but they didn't have
the technology to do that. Theydidn't, I don't think so maybe thirties
or forties. So our friend theankulosaurus, you know, it's just like,

(28:06):
I don't know, I don't know, Like, if you think about
it, it's just very strange thatwe know all this stuff about things that
was sixty five million years before anyof us were alive. That's all I'm
saying. It's good to ask questions. Is it good to lean into our
ignorance? Hey, I'm trying.I'm not trying to be ignorant. I'm
just asking as I'm asking the hardquestions here. All I'm saying is I

(28:29):
just like the ankulosaurus had a clubfor a tail. We know this,
and we also know what existed sixtyfive million years ago. How do we
know that that? I'm just likeradiometric dating of volcanic saying there's a chance
that maybe they made that up too. I don't know anyway, Okay,
we'll start at three o'clock hour.Our friend Jim Maxwell will be joining us
to start the hour on news radioeleven ten KFAB
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