Thomas G. Barnes (August 14, 1911 – October 23, 2001) was an American creationist, who argued in support of his religious belief in a young earth by making the faulty scientific claims that the Earth's magnetic field was consistently decaying.
At the time that Barnes joined the Creation Research Society (CRS) in the early 1960s, he was the head of the Schellenger Research Laboratories at Texas Western College (now University of Texas at El Paso), where he was completing a textbook on electricity and magnetism,[2] and on whose faculty he served from 1938 until he retired in 1981.[3] Barnes headed one of the first projects of the CRS, to create a creationist high school biology text.[4] Barnes served as the president of the CRS in the mid-1970s.[5]
Earth's magnetic field decay
Barnes claimed to calculate the half-life of the earth'smagnetic field as approximately 1,400 years based on 130 years of empirical data.[6][7] Some creationists have used Barnes' argument as evidence for a young earth, less than 10,000 years as suggested by the Bible.[8] His critics have challenged this concept, claiming that Barnes failed to take experimental uncertainties into account and used an obsolete model of the interior of the earth.[9][10]
Works
Books
Thomas G. Barnes, Science and Biblical Faith: A Science Documentary, Creation Research Society Books, 191pp. (1993) (ISBN978-0963755001).
Thomas G. Barnes, Space Medium: The Key to Unified Physics, Geo/Space Research Foundation, 170pp. (1986) (ISBN978-0936961019).
Thomas G. Barnes, Physics of the Future: A Classical Unification of Physics, Master Books, 208pp., (1983) (ISBN978-0932766090).
Thomas G. Barnes, Foundations of Electricity and Magnetism, Heath, 331pp., (1965) (ASIN B0006BMTRU).
Articles
Thomas G. Barnes, "Resonant Optics for Detection of Rotation and Translation", Galilean Electrodynamics, V2, N3, p. 55 [Correspondence V2, N4, p. 77] (1991).
Thomas G. Barnes & Harold S. Slusher, "Space Medium Theory Applied to Lunar and Stellar Aberration", Galilean Electrodynamics, V1, N4, p. 43 [Correspondence V1, N5, p. 68] (1990).