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Geologic time scale
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=== The advent of geochronometry === During the 19th century, the debate regarding Earth's age was renewed, with geologists estimating ages based on [[denudation]] rates and sedimentary thicknesses or ocean chemistry, and physicists determining ages for the cooling of the Earth or the Sun using basic [[thermodynamics]] or orbital physics.<ref name="Dalrymple 2001 AoE" /> These estimations varied from 15,000 million years to 0.075 million years depending on method and author, but the estimations of [[William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin|Lord Kelvin]] and [[Clarence King]] were held in high regard at the time due to their pre-eminence in physics and geology. All of these early geochronometric determinations would later prove to be incorrect. The discovery of [[radioactive decay]] by [[Henri Becquerel]], [[Marie Curie]], and [[Pierre Curie]] laid the ground work for radiometric dating, but the knowledge and tools required for accurate determination of radiometric ages would not be in place until the mid-1950s.<ref name="Dalrymple 2001 AoE" /> Early attempts at determining ages of uranium minerals and rocks by [[Ernest Rutherford]], [[Bertram Boltwood]], [[Robert Strutt, 4th Baron Rayleigh|Robert Strutt]], and Arthur Holmes, would culminate in what are considered the first international geological time scales by Holmes in 1911 and 1913.<ref name="Holmes_19113"/><ref name="Holmes 1913">{{Cite book |last=Holmes |first=Arthur |url=http://archive.org/details/ageofearth00holmuoft |title=The age of the earth |date=1913 |publisher=London, Harper |others=Gerstein - University of Toronto}}</ref><ref name="Lewis_2001">{{Cite journal |last=Lewis |first=Cherry L. E. |date=2001 |title=Arthur Holmes' vision of a geological timescale |url=http://sp.lyellcollection.org/lookup/doi/10.1144/GSL.SP.2001.190.01.10 |journal=Geological Society, London, Special Publications |language=en |volume=190 |issue=1 |pages=121β138 |doi=10.1144/GSL.SP.2001.190.01.10 |bibcode=2001GSLSP.190..121L |s2cid=128686640 |issn=0305-8719}}</ref> The discovery of [[isotope]]s in 1913<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Soddy |first=Frederick |date=1913-12-04 |title=Intra-atomic Charge |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/092399c0 |journal=Nature |language=en |volume=92 |issue=2301 |pages=399β400 |doi=10.1038/092399c0 |bibcode=1913Natur..92..399S |s2cid=3965303 |issn=0028-0836}}</ref> by [[Frederick Soddy]], and the developments in [[mass spectrometry]] pioneered by [[Francis William Aston]], [[Arthur Jeffrey Dempster]], and [[Alfred O. C. Nier]] during the early to mid-[[20th century]] would finally allow for the accurate determination of radiometric ages, with Holmes publishing several revisions to his ''geological time-scale'' with his final version in 1960.<ref name="Dalrymple 2001 AoE" /><ref name="Lewis_2001" /><ref name="Holmes_1960">{{Cite journal |last=Holmes |first=A. |date=1959-01-01 |title=A revised geological time-scale |url=http://trned.lyellcollection.org/cgi/doi/10.1144/transed.17.3.183 |journal=Transactions of the Edinburgh Geological Society |language=en |volume=17 |issue=3 |pages=183β216 |doi=10.1144/transed.17.3.183 |s2cid=129166282 |issn=0371-6260}}</ref><ref name="GTS1960">{{Cite journal |date=1960 |title=A Revised Geological Time-Scale |journal=Nature |language=en |volume=187 |issue=4731 |pages=27β28 |doi=10.1038/187027d0 |bibcode=1960Natur.187T..27. |s2cid=4179334 |issn=0028-0836|doi-access=free }}</ref>
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