Carbon 14 dating 1 | Life on earth and in the universe | Cosmology & Astronomy | Khan Academy

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@sugam_24
@sugam_24 3 жыл бұрын
When the video was released I was in grade 2.😂😂 Now I'm in grade 12 watching this video for physics. Isn't time an amazing thing?😂
@AaAa-zz2hl
@AaAa-zz2hl Жыл бұрын
ឮឲឪឲឪឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲកកឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឪឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឮឲ្យឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឪឲឲ្យឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲ្យឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲកកឲ្យឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឮឲឮឲឪឲ្យឲឲឪឲឲឪឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឮមកឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲមកឲឲឱឲឲឪឲឪឲ្យឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឮឲឲឮឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឮឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឪឲឮឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឮឲឮឲឮឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឪឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឮឲឮឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឱឲឲឲឲឮឲឮឲឮឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឮឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲមកឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឪឲឮឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឮឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឮឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឱឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឮឲឮឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲកកឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឮឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឮឮឪឲឮឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឮឪឲឮឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឮឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឮឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឮឮឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឮឮឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឱឪឲឪឮឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឮឲឲឲឮឲឲឪឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឮឲឲឲឲឪឲឪឲឲឲឪឲឪឮឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឪឲឪឲឪឮឲឲឲឲឲឲឮឮឪឮឲឲឲឮឪឮឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឮឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឪឲឲឲឲឪឪឲឲឪឮឲឲឲ្យឲឮឲឮឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឮមកឲឲឮឪឪឲឲឲឲឪឪឲឲឮឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឮឪឪឲឲឲឲឪឲឮឪឲឲឲឮឪឲឲឮឲឲឲឪឪឲឪឪឲឲឪឲឮឲឮឲឮឲឮឮឲឮឲឮឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឮឪឲឪឪឪឲឮឲឮឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឲឮឮឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឪឮឲឮឲឮឲឲឮឲឲឲឲឪឲឪឲឪឲឪឪឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឮឲឲឲឆាឮឮឲឮឲឲឲឮឲឲឲឲឲឮឲឲឮឲឪមកឲឲឮឲឲឲឮឲឲ្យឪឲឪឲឲឮឪឲឲឪឮឮ
@AaAa-zz2hl
@AaAa-zz2hl Жыл бұрын
ឲឪឮឲឲឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឪឮឲឲឪឲឮឮឲឪឪឲឲឪឲឲឲឮឮឲឮឲឲឲឲឮឲឲឮឲឲឪឲលើឪឪឪឪឲឲឪឪឪឲឲឪឮឪឲឲឲឮឪឪឪឲឪឮឲឲឪឪឲមកឮឲឪឲឲឲឲ្យឪឲឪឮឲឮឲឲឪឪឲឲឮឲឮឲឮឪឮឪឲឪឮឮឪឪឲឲឲ្យឲឲឮឪឲឲឲមកឲឲឪឲឮឪឲឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឮឲឪឪឲឮឲឲឪឲមកឲឪឲឮឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឪឪឲឲឪឲឲឲឲឮឲឪឲឲឮឲឲឮឮឲឲឮមកឲឪឲឪឲឪឲឮឲឪឲឲឲឲឲឪឮឲឲឲឮឪឲឲឲឲ
@sofiadeangelis-qu7oh
@sofiadeangelis-qu7oh Жыл бұрын
hi there im from the future, but im watching this in grade 9..
@thecatwhocriedmeow
@thecatwhocriedmeow Жыл бұрын
​@@sofiadeangelis-qu7ohyou need to get your 'time concept' fixed before your exams.
@sofiadeangelis-qu7oh
@sofiadeangelis-qu7oh Жыл бұрын
wdym@@thecatwhocriedmeow
@amaizenblue44
@amaizenblue44 12 жыл бұрын
That's why we calibrate it against dendrochronology, speleothem dating, coral dating, ice core dating, varve chronology, and others... Scientists don't assume that the concentration has always been the same. In fact, we know that it hasn't...and we correct for it. In fact, we use that knowledge to learn new things about the atmosphere around that time...like maybe a volcano erupted
@Innengelaender
@Innengelaender 5 жыл бұрын
Thanks this always bothered me because I always assumed that a small percentage of different carbon Isotopes naturally coexist, like Uranium 235 and 238. Never heard or made that connection that Carbon-14 only gets formed in the athmosphere and the decay in dead bodies only goes in one direction.
@thadhaines1631
@thadhaines1631 12 жыл бұрын
The only thing that in my opinion makes C14 dating unreliable past a certain point is the fact that we don't know the earth has made the same amount of C14 in the past as it is now. Atmospheric changes since creation would suggest that C14 formed at a different rate as compared to now therefore making our constant we compare with inaccurate.
@amaizenblue44
@amaizenblue44 12 жыл бұрын
Everything absorbs at about the same concentration as is in the atmosphere. No, that concentration does not remain constant. But we can identify the changes in concentration throughout time by comparing the carbon dating with other forms of dating techniques that do not use radioactive decay, like dendrochronology, varve chronology, coral dating, etc.
@16jrsoccer
@16jrsoccer 14 жыл бұрын
thats crazyyy, i just started this unit in school today.. aha youre the best.. also think about doing some genetics in the biology tab?
@1990MrAnderson
@1990MrAnderson 12 жыл бұрын
that all makes sense, but what i don't get is how we can know 1/2 of the carbon 14, in a bone, is gone.. how do you know its 1/2 or a 1/4 of the carbon 14 that it started with, you'd have to know the amount it started with to say its 1/2... does everythin absorb a set amount, is carbon 14 created at a constant rate?
@djaste7
@djaste7 14 жыл бұрын
thank you for sharing your knowledge with us... appriciate it. well done! sir
@Waranle
@Waranle 14 жыл бұрын
Thank you Sal
@nivinajith5334
@nivinajith5334 3 жыл бұрын
@Khan Academy Do you mean that the amound of C-14 is constant (roughly) in all living organisms?
@vicksoma
@vicksoma 13 жыл бұрын
@AngelKnight85268 Potassium-Argon dating is used for dating things that are millions of years old. It's half life is 1.25 billion years. Sal made a video about it in this playlist.
@tritile
@tritile 14 жыл бұрын
Great!
@MultiUplift
@MultiUplift 4 жыл бұрын
Excellent explanation
@GeologyJack
@GeologyJack 14 жыл бұрын
To back Hooya2 up, it is true that the rates are not constant but we actually have the ability to find the concentrations of C-14 in the past. We can determine direct ages via ring counting of stalagmites and stalactites. Due to the nature of these formations, they lock away atmosphere in a way that there is no mixing with the current concentrations, Through this we have a record of the concentrations of the past. It is also worth noting that the amounts correlate directly with ice cores.
@csl9495
@csl9495 8 жыл бұрын
can you please put these on the khan academy app.... or prehaps I missed it. the app in regards to biology sort if ends after ecology
@rabebmabrouki5794
@rabebmabrouki5794 8 жыл бұрын
All hot girls are here => twitter.com/b820da66252a48305/status/801992405775826944 Carbon 14 dating 1 Life on earth аand in the universee Cоsmology Astrоnoоmу Кhan Acadеmy
@noxure
@noxure 14 жыл бұрын
@Houston810 Yes but he's talking about the element N, not the substance nitrogen.
@AcanLord
@AcanLord 14 жыл бұрын
@Hooya2 You are right. i double checked. Its phosphorous, not sulphur my bad.
@libertynindependence
@libertynindependence 11 жыл бұрын
"1/4 of the Carbon 14 that you would expect to find" I don't know why anyone can't see that as a huge assumption. If you change the amount that you "expect" to find, you change the result in a huge way!
@AcanLord
@AcanLord 14 жыл бұрын
@inad316 You are talking about the Arsenic Bacteria found in Mono lake. It still contains carbon, the element this bacteria replaces in its biochemistry is Sulphur.
@Rendall81
@Rendall81 8 жыл бұрын
@TechiesPlace : it's not just losing a neutron , this particular neutron turn into a proton, thus not affecting the mass of the atom as per defenition ( mass = amount of protons + neutrons in the nucleus ), however changing the nature of the atom dues to the amount of protons now present ( which is determined but the amounts of protons only ) Hope that's clear enough to answer your questions !
@darthkenobi66
@darthkenobi66 5 жыл бұрын
7:02 "breathing from the atmosphere if you are a plant", does a plant even watch this video?
@muhammadhussainsarhandi9928
@muhammadhussainsarhandi9928 4 жыл бұрын
Plants are living things, even non-living things also watch Khan Academy videos, do you need a proof for this?
@animals0feel1pain2
@animals0feel1pain2 14 жыл бұрын
Can someone explain how you measure C-14? Do you compare it with the ratio of N-14? Or do you compare it with the ratio of C-12? Because it seems that measuring the amount of C-14 doesn't do you any good, since obtaining a larger sample of carbon would yield more C-14 atoms.
@idave147
@idave147 12 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this instructive lesson on Carbon 14 dating.
@madjack5002
@madjack5002 6 жыл бұрын
7:20 In 2011 physicists at Stanford and Purdue placed the whole theory of "constant radioactive decay rates" under question. They have found in some cases there is fluctuation in the rate of decay. They theorize that the fluctuation is caused by solar neutrinos which until this finding was believed not to interact with anything it came in contact with.
@jackp6
@jackp6 9 жыл бұрын
most important question... How is half-life estimated?
@stronggers
@stronggers 9 жыл бұрын
+jackp6 T(1/2) = Ln (2)/K
@vedant6633
@vedant6633 7 жыл бұрын
By experiments
@Cyberpuppy63
@Cyberpuppy63 6 жыл бұрын
By amount of carbon 14 taken in, by item - when it was alive. Test works poorly on "contaminated" samples or items fraudulently manipulated.
@AndrewSindel
@AndrewSindel 13 жыл бұрын
At 4:17 it is stated that we are mostly made up of Carbon 12 and only a small portion of us is Carbon 14, but at 8:51 the quote was "one-half the Carbon 14 of all the living things you see." My question becomes this: How can you be sure that there was a specific amount of Carbon 14 in the body to begin with? Does age come into play? What if the bone was from a person who was a herbivore or carnivore? Does that make a difference?
@kacperm.5127
@kacperm.5127 11 ай бұрын
I suppose the answer may lie in statistics. We can imagine taking a mean of a large sample. The large sample may be that of a fish species living in a given region. We may measure the proportion Carbon14 / (Carbon14 + Carbon12) in each observation. Then we can get a mean proportion and may use it to predict how old the predecessor of that fish is whose bones were found below the sea's bed.
@zamdwa7084
@zamdwa7084 11 жыл бұрын
Why is this rate so fixed?and why is the amount of c14 in living things fixed too?
@umeshjinamaste
@umeshjinamaste 6 жыл бұрын
If an organism have ten C14 atoms at the time of death, will all atoms go for decay or only five of them will go for radioactive decay ( as explained after half life the no of C14 would be five) Is second assumption is correct then 1. Why only 5 will go for radioactive decay? 2. Which of the 5 atoms will go for radioactive decay, and why?
@GenieInAFantaBottle
@GenieInAFantaBottle 14 жыл бұрын
oh and btw great vid!
@maracachucho8701
@maracachucho8701 13 жыл бұрын
@AngelKnight85268 The general term is radiometric dating, which is composed of a lot of different methods based on uranium, potassium and carbon (among others i don't remember of course).
@eggie545
@eggie545 14 жыл бұрын
the next part he alludes to is about exponential decay diff equations...
@tommietwp
@tommietwp 11 жыл бұрын
before reading my question, please understand that it is neither sarcasm nor confrontation: where in the bible is the date(s) of creation provided?
@johnwilliamson8327
@johnwilliamson8327 5 жыл бұрын
It isn't. The estimates are primarily made from the geneologies that are provided, and the recorded ages. There have also been some archeological finds with regards to some of the ancient kingdoms.
@Ben-br1bu
@Ben-br1bu 5 жыл бұрын
I still don't understand it. Isn't the ratio in a body dependant on the ratio in the atmosphere? How do know what the ratio in the atmosphere was when the thing died? You said that Carbon 14 is produced at a constant rate in the atmosphere and it also decays at a constant rate (and I assume it does this also in the atmosphere), so the ratio should change over time, shouldn't it? So, wouldn't the calculation of the time when the organism died be dependant on when the organism died because the ratio would be different at different times?
@jlupus8804
@jlupus8804 3 жыл бұрын
So how does C-14 decay back into N-14? That I do not understand.
@AcanLord
@AcanLord 14 жыл бұрын
@CogitoErgoCogitoSum -- We assume that all life as about equal C14 concentration even at this very moment - --- No we don`t really. C-14 concentrations in marine enviroments are much lower and not as uniform as in terrestrial enviroments, Consequently it is not considered useful in dating remains found in marine enviroments.
@sargecharge1411
@sargecharge1411 8 жыл бұрын
the video mentions that C-14 gets converted to N-14 by losing a neutron. If the atom loses a neutron how can it still be N-14 and not N-13
@jmaried.9642
@jmaried.9642 8 жыл бұрын
It's because it's not really 'losing' but that the neutron becomes a proton and an electron by Beta emission. So, despite losing a neutron, it does get a proton and the count is still then 14. (C-14: 6 protons and 8 neutrons = 14) (N-14: 7 protons and 7 neutrons = 14)
@lilykenley9104
@lilykenley9104 4 жыл бұрын
How can it be used for extinct organisms because then there wont be any alive one from whom you can compare the the number of C14 atoms please explain this to me.. I wanna know how it can be done for extinct organisms
@superdau
@superdau 14 жыл бұрын
@siggyboss It doesn't matter, because it's the ration of C-12 to C-14. If you eat more you eat more of both, so the ratio stays the same.
@25jpg
@25jpg 3 жыл бұрын
8:24 how do we know the proportion of carbon 12 to 14 was the same in the past as it is now?
@prashantsingh5331
@prashantsingh5331 5 жыл бұрын
How the amount of C14 in atmosphere always have been same ?
@prashanthns54321
@prashanthns54321 4 жыл бұрын
There must be some reason or else why scientist use it
@Ta3iapxHs
@Ta3iapxHs 4 жыл бұрын
How about solar activity? Volcanoes? We are talking about tens of thousands of years here. How can we be sure nothing out of the ordinary happened.
@prashanthns54321
@prashanthns54321 4 жыл бұрын
@@Ta3iapxHs C 14 is usually created only by cosmic rays in upper atmosphere which then in the form of CO2 is inhaled by organisms. Volcanoes produce CO2 but not C 14 CO2
@prashanthns54321
@prashanthns54321 4 жыл бұрын
@@Ta3iapxHs and scientist make sure contaminants don't spoil the dating by various methods. For example if we touch the sample the cells from our finger which contain carbon can hastle the value. So they clean of the phospholipids first.
@Ta3iapxHs
@Ta3iapxHs 4 жыл бұрын
@@prashanthns54321 For Volcanoes I mean: If CO2 (in general) is increased in the atmosphere, for example from volcanoes or today's industrial evolution, what happens to the C14 / C12 ratio? Is it the same?
@RA-om8ck
@RA-om8ck 2 жыл бұрын
Carbon-12 makes up 99 percent of the carbon in the universe. Carbon-13 makes up about 1 percent. Carbon-14 makes up less than 1 percent. Carbon-12 and carbon-13 are stable, but carbon-14 is unstable. This is fascinating, I love your videos!
@seth.heerschap
@seth.heerschap 12 жыл бұрын
I wonder if it's still possible to detect carbon-14 in dinosaur bones. Like, does the rate at which carbon-14 slow down inversely exponentially?
@GenieInAFantaBottle
@GenieInAFantaBottle 14 жыл бұрын
oh yea. first!! haha
@amandanekuda4702
@amandanekuda4702 6 жыл бұрын
2018
@Lavabug
@Lavabug 14 жыл бұрын
@CogitoErgoCogitoSum You should pose that question to a nuclear physicist. I believe it involves testing for beta decay on shorter timespans and later extrapolating. The fact that the predictions it makes are consistent with the concentrations found in progressively deeper fossil remains also helps.
@88dizi88
@88dizi88 11 жыл бұрын
How did scientists determine that the half life of carbon is roughly 5730 years? How does one go about proving this?
@cyberprodigy
@cyberprodigy 14 жыл бұрын
Thanks for explaining. Now I finally know how they are doing C14 dating (;. But I guess few thousand years ago carbon 12 isotope was less common then today.
@hahs4
@hahs4 13 жыл бұрын
that is so sad, I will not be able to eat anything containing C-14 once I am dead
@seth.heerschap
@seth.heerschap 12 жыл бұрын
But, you can only date girls that were once alive :o
@Rant.t24
@Rant.t24 4 жыл бұрын
The meer rules of phyisic can not stop a might power such as Mr Khan
@dr1303
@dr1303 13 жыл бұрын
I'm mostly dating girls...
@GSpotter63
@GSpotter63 12 жыл бұрын
Part 1) Radio carbon dating assumes that the amount of Co14 in the atmosphere has always been the same. But there again, we have no way of verifying that. The fact that insects grew to as much as 8 times their present size indicates that in the past o2 levels and atmosphere pressure (14 N) was indeed much higher. Would not those higher levels have greatly alter the formation of Co14 in the atmosphere and hence the amount or % of Co14 invalidating that dating method?
@metalmanmac1
@metalmanmac1 9 жыл бұрын
"or...if you are a plant" Good ol Sal, being so inclusive of the plant community in the audience
@00Shahad00
@00Shahad00 14 жыл бұрын
my head hurts
@Houston810
@Houston810 14 жыл бұрын
isn't N(g) a diatomic gas?
@GSpotter63
@GSpotter63 12 жыл бұрын
Part 2) And then there is the amount of cosmic radiation. Again the carbon 14 dating method assumes that the amount of cosmic radiation has remained the same for the past 50,000 years. Just a 10% drop in radiation would result in a sample appearing thousands of years older. Can you guarantee and verify that the cosmic radiation has remained the same?
@mrhnm
@mrhnm 14 жыл бұрын
@Hooya2 but carbon dating cant be right it cant accurately date stone tools! Warning: That was sarcasm.
@Cyberpuppy63
@Cyberpuppy63 6 жыл бұрын
that's because stone tools aren't living to begin with. Only works "best" with organic samples.
@muhammadnazir4178
@muhammadnazir4178 5 жыл бұрын
The life of C-14 is 5568 years.
@karhukivi
@karhukivi 3 жыл бұрын
Half-life, not "life".
@paulceltics
@paulceltics 13 жыл бұрын
100th like
@StephenLee1
@StephenLee1 13 жыл бұрын
I dated a carbon once, she was clingy.
@aysham666
@aysham666 5 жыл бұрын
Why the half life of c14 is 5730yrs How it has been determined
@karhukivi
@karhukivi 3 жыл бұрын
By the amount of beta decay compared to the amount present - 1 gram-mole contains Avogadro's number of atoms. So when the proportion of decaying atoms is compared to the amount present, you have the decay constant. As decay is exponential, dividing the decay constant into ln(2) gives the half-life. This has been determined many times and compared to tree rings and other historical accurate dates for improved calibration, hence the small changes in the accepted half-life value.
@GSpotter63
@GSpotter63 12 жыл бұрын
Part 3) As you can see, it takes a lot of assuming (AKA faith) to hold to the old Earth theory. Interesting, if the history of the world as it is outlined in the bible is true ( massive changes to the atmosphere and the geology at the time of the flood) than the Co14 dating method dos not require any assuming for it to fit perfectly.
@amaizenblue44
@amaizenblue44 12 жыл бұрын
Yawn. Kent Hovind, really?
@indhuagarwal8705
@indhuagarwal8705 11 жыл бұрын
My fat brother managed to make the best pole dancer there is in my town fall for him as he ran the Cupid Love System (Google it). I wish I was happy for him but I want such a sexy lady to fall for me. I am totally green with envy. Does that mean I’m a horrible person?
@adogandi
@adogandi 12 жыл бұрын
Let me guess, the Bible? Get out of here.
@ScaredCrows
@ScaredCrows 14 жыл бұрын
KEEP THE F****** DEBATES OFF THE KHAN ACADEMY CHANELL!!! pretty please
@djaste7
@djaste7 14 жыл бұрын
thank you for sharing your knowledge with us... appriciate it. well done! sir
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