March 14, 2019

Showing 9 comments
  • Caroline5765
    Reply

    Thank you Ben, never heard of that region much less the concern

  • CJackJr
    Reply

    Ben, can you give the citation for the source of the data in the graph? Thanks.

  • Frauleen
    Reply

    Thanks Ben. Here’s another possibilty… cubic miles of water were locked up in poles in the form of ice making oceanic levels several hundred feet lower, there by exposing more coastal land and allowing easier migration. The exposed land bridge would have provided a barrier between Arctic and Pacific oceans, making coastal climate more moderate. This scenario doesn’t necessarily exclude crustal shift, IMO. Many submerged coastal ruins have been discovered in recent years to suggest ocean levels were much, much lower than current levels.
    Add in the strong possibility, which Velikovsky and McCanney propose, of a major water sequestering event from Mars-Venus(as a comet) interaction, and we can only imagine how much more land was exposed prior to this incredible event (ie. Noah’s flood). This would also explain the ease of ocean travel prior to this event, which would have been more like island hopping during the time of Atlantis’ CIVILIZATION.

  • Frauleen
    Reply

    On a different note, does climate data include methane emissions? Methane has 20 times the effect of CO2 on the greenhouse effect, it’s exclusion would be synonymous with omitting solar forcing data from climate change data. Seems like it would be difficult to measure since it is more of a seepage from ocean floors and thawing tundras. My suspicions indicate methane clathrate releases as the foremost cause of mass marine die-offs. I shudder to think of what the experience of being a victim in the near vicinity of one of these must be like. Sudden loss of buoyancy followed by immediate crushing pressures as that void fills back in with water. Immediate death for any poor soul caught in that trap.

  • Joe.¤.
    Reply

    Ben, I have some things I
    opportunity been spoken with ivan stein

  • Monka
    Reply

    Another thought:

    The quantity of water is assumed to be fixed and blowing off. What if Venus migrated as a comet and dumped 40 days and 40 nights worth of water on the earth? How much would it have dumped is relative to how close we were in the cone so hard to say. Unless you use the empirical evidence of the error you are working with. That is the quantity. Not sexy but KISS.

    • EClay
      Reply

      Just curious, i know that no one really has the answer, but how is it that venus is said to have migrated in that way? Is this going back to a theory from Velokovsky? How might that occur?

  • Bo Shaffer
    Reply

    What makes you think that the growing cold and worsening weather didn’t drive them to find new territory? They didn’t really move when the weather was nice….no need.

    • EClay
      Reply

      Bo Shaffer – Usually it drives people to warmer climates, but of course that may be a generalization.

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