| The age and fate of Saturn's rings | Henry, J. 2006.
JC 20(1):123-127. CELD ID 18679Abstract When Saturn was the only known ringed planet, the rings were believed to be as old as the solar system - 4.6 billion years in the conventional chronology. The existence of the rings to the present day was taken as evidence of this chronology. In the 1970s and 1980s, other planets were found to have short-lived, rapidly dissipating rings with life times of the order of millennia. Subsequently, the view of the age of Saturn's rings began to change. They are now viewed conventionally as no more than hundreds of millions of years old, and a former prop of the conventional chronology has now vanished. Furthermore, an examination of ring observations and data unconstrained by conventional chronology indicates that the actual life time of Saturn's rings may be of the order of tens of thousands of years, and possibly less. This age fits in perfectly with the biblical Creation/Fall/Flood model, and opens up possibilities for effectively explaining their origin within a biblical framework.
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