9Molecular divergence dating has the potential to overcome the incompleteness of the fossil record in 10 inferring when cladogenetic events (splits, divergences) happened, but needs to be calibrated by the 11 fossil record. Ideally but unrealistically, this would require practitioners to be specialists in molecular 12 evolution, in the phylogeny and the fossil record of all sampled taxa, and in the chronostratigraphy of 13 the sites the fossils were found in. Paleontologists have therefore tried to help by publishing 14 compendia of recommended calibrations, and molecular biologists unfamiliar with the fossil record 15have made heavy use of such works. Using a recent example of a large timetree inferred from 16 molecular data, I demonstrate that calibration dates cannot be taken from published compendia 17 without risking strong distortions to the results, because compendia become outdated faster than they 18 are published. The present work cannot serve as such a compendium either; in the slightly longer 19 term, it can only highlight known and overlooked problems. Future authors will need to solve each of 20 these problems anew through a thorough search of the primary paleobiological and 21 chronostratigraphic literature on each calibration date every time they infer a new timetree; over 40% 22 of the sources I cite were published after mid-2016. 23 Treating all calibrations as soft bounds results in younger nodes than treating all calibrations as hard 24bounds. The unexpected exception are nodes calibrated with both minimum and maximum ages, 25 further demonstrating the widely underestimated importance of maximum ages in divergence dating. 26