ABSTRACT One of the Bible’s most ridiculed claims is its assertion that pre-Flood and immediate post-Flood humans experienced lifespans of hundreds of years. Hence, the ability to partially corroborate the Bible’s claim in this regard should be of great interest to creation researchers. Paleontologists have within the last two decades become increasingly interested in using growth rings recorded in fossil forms to make inferences about past growth rates, sizes, and lifespans. Examination of these growth rings suggest that some creatures in the pre-Flood world matured quite slowly compared to similar extant forms. Also, multiple studies have shown that slower development and greater ages at maturity are positively correlated with longevity in extant forms, including terrestrial vertebrates (including birds), marine bivalves, at least one species of fish, and even trees. Hence, evidence of slower growth in extinct forms could be evidence of greater animal longevity in the past. This seems reasonable, since whatever regulatory systems and physiological responses enabled greater pre-Flood human longevity may have also been active in at least part of the pre-Flood animal kingdom. Hence, some animals may have experienced much greater longevity than their descendants of today, and if so, this is indirect corroboration of the Bible’s claim of greater past human longevity. There is also some evidence that larger size at maturity is also positively correlated with longer lifespan, which is intriguing, given that many pre-Flood animals seem to have been much larger than their modern-day counterparts. Unfortunately, these kinds of studies are difficult to perform on many fossil forms, because some of the growth rings that form first in the course of an organism’s development are often ‘erased’ as the animal matures. However, there are other organisms more suited for this kind of study, such as marine bivalves, sharks, and crocodylians. In most examples of this phenomenon, the extinct and extant forms have been assigned to different species. But given the tendency of some taxonomists to ‘over-split’, in many cases these extinct and extant pairings of animals likely represent the same Genesis kind. Moreover, it is possible to compare growth rates between different species using a calculated ‘index of growth performance’, as long as the two species have similar body shapes. This poster discusses three lines of preliminary evidence for greater longevity in the pre-Flood animal kingdom. Some 40-50-year-old preFlood crocodylians were apparently growing at rates comparable to 20-30-year-old extant crocodylians. Growth bands in Ptychodontid shark vertebrae from upper Cretaceous strata suggest it was a rapidly-growing “adolescent” shark, though it was 30-years old at time of death. Also, vertebrae growth rings imply that an Otodus megalodon shark found in Miocene strata was still growing rapidly at the age of 46. Likewise, there is sclerochronological evidence (albeit possibly conflicting) that pre-Flood clams matured more slowly and lived longer than extant counterparts within the same genus and/or species. Given that the extreme longevity of the antediluvian patriarchs is one of the areas remaining where we do not yet have a strong apologetics defense, I appeal to creationist paleontologists, biologists, and statisticians to zealously and rigorously assist in pursuing this line of inquiry. It may be the case that fossils can demonstrate that at least some animals in the pre-Flood world were experiencing much greater longevity than their counterparts of today. If so, this would help to partially corroborate the Bible’s claim regarding much greater human longevity in the past. KEYWORDS Longevity, fossils, paleontology, antediluvian, pre-Flood, ontogenetic growth, lifespans THE AUTHOR Leo (Jake) Hebert, III earned a B.S. from Lamar University, an M.S. from Texas A&M University, and a Ph.D. (all in physics) from the University of Texas at Dallas. His Ph.D. work examined the possible link between solar activity, cosmic rays, and weather and climate. He has been passionate about creation research since his teenage years. He is a research scientist at the Institute for Creation Research in Dallas, TX, where he has been employed since 2011. Leo (Jake) Hebert III, Institute for Creation Research, 1806 Royal Lane, Dallas, Texas 75229 jhebert@ICR.org © Cedarville University International Conference on Creationism. The views expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent those of Cedarville University. 9th 2023 659 Hebert III, L. 2023. Paleo-Ontogenetic Growth Curves: Evidence for Extreme Past Animal Longevity? [poster]. In J.H. Whitmore (editor), Proceedings of the Ninth International Conference on Creationism, pp. 659-660. Cedarville, Ohio: Cedarville University International Conference on Creationism. PALEO-ONTOGENETIC GROWTH CURVES: EVIDENCE FOR EXTREME PAST ANIMAL LONGEVITY?
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