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Scientists find signs of 13,000-year-old extinction event
Chicago Tribune ^ | January 2, 2009 | Robert Mitchum

Posted on 01/01/2009 2:09:17 PM PST by neverdem

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To: org.whodat; SunkenCiv
Until I have perused the long list of publications re this event listed in SunkenCiv's #40 here, I don't feel qualified to comment on the evidence (or lack thereof) for it as found in the fossil record. I recommend that you take a look at #40, as well -- rather than starting off with your dogmatic "BS" assumption...
61 posted on 01/01/2009 9:01:04 PM PST by TXnMA ("Allah": Satan's current alias...!!)
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To: org.whodat; SunkenCiv
Ooops! I see that I somehow botched that second #40 link.

The longer first one, however, works just fine (as does this one)...

62 posted on 01/01/2009 9:08:33 PM PST by TXnMA ("Allah": Satan's current alias...!!)
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To: txflake
Happy New Year to you too, txflake.

An English Mastiff, that's a big dog.

My dogs are doing just fine, thanks.

63 posted on 01/01/2009 9:10:19 PM PST by blam
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To: djf; Coyoteman; blam; SunkenCiv
This abstract from one of the FR threads cited by SunkenCiv in #40 specifically cites correlating evidence from fifteen of the Carolina Bay depression sediments:

Evidence for an extraterrestrial impact 12,900 years ago

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, October 9, 2007, Vol. 104

^ | Setember 27, 2007 | R. B. Firestone, et. al.

Posted on September 30, 2007 12:14:28 PM CDT by baynut

A carbon-rich black layer, dating to 12.9 ka, has been previously identified at 50 Clovis-age sites across North America and appears contemporaneous with the abrupt onset of Younger Dryas (YD) cooling. The in situ bones of extinct Pleistocene megafauna, along with Clovis tool assemblages, occur below this black layer but not within or above it. Causes for the extinctions, YD cooling, and termination of Clovis culture have long been controversial. In this paper, we provide evidence for an extraterrestrial (ET) impact event at 12.9 ka, which we hypothesize caused abrupt environmental changes that contributed to YD cooling, major ecological reorganization, broad-scale extinctions, and rapid human behavioral shifts at the end of the Clovis Period. Clovis-age sites in North American are overlain by a thin, discrete layer with varying peak abundances of (i)magnetic grains with iridium, (ii) magnetic microspherules, (iii) charcoal, (iv) soot, (v) carbon spherules, (vi) glass-like carbon containing nanodiamonds, and (vii) fullerenes with ET helium, all of which are evidence for an ET impact and associated biomass burning at 12.9 ka. This layer also extends throughout at least 15 Carolina Bays, which are unique, elliptical depressions, oriented to the northwest across the Atlantic Coastal Plain. We propose that one or more large, low-density ET objects exploded over northern North America, partially destabilizing the Laurentide Ice Sheet and triggering YD cooling. The shock wave, thermal pulse, and event-related environmental effects (e.g., extensive biomass burning and food limitations) contributed to end-Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions and adaptive shifts among PaleoAmericans in North America.

Peer-reviewed NAS paper -- not usually crackpot stuff...

64 posted on 01/01/2009 9:44:52 PM PST by TXnMA ("Allah": Satan's current alias...!!)
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To: TXnMA

I had actually stumbled across the abstract for that earlier, and was reading the full report when the phone rang!

http://www.pnas.org/content/104/41/16016.full


65 posted on 01/01/2009 9:50:12 PM PST by djf (< Tagline closed until further notice. Awaiting bailout >)
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To: TXnMA
Peer-reviewed NAS paper -- not usually crackpot stuff...

And the version coming out tomorrow is in Science.

BTW: I know two of the authors; not crackpots at all.

66 posted on 01/01/2009 9:52:14 PM PST by Coyoteman (Religious belief does not constitute scientific evidence, nor does it convey scientific knowledge.)
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To: TXnMA; djf

The book in post #37 is an excellent book.


67 posted on 01/01/2009 9:52:56 PM PST by blam
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To: neverdem

bttt.


68 posted on 01/01/2009 10:16:01 PM PST by rdl6989
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To: Coyoteman; djf; blam; SunkenCiv; neverdem
Here is one of the more clear-cut statements re the correlation between the Carolina Bays and this explosive event:

http://www.sciencenews.org/view/access/id/30552

A host of unusual geological features, collectively known as Carolina Bays, hints at the cataclysm's location, says team member George A. Howard, a wetland manager at Restoration Systems, an environmental-restoration firm in Raleigh, N.C. Around 1 million of these elliptical, sand-rimmed depressions, measuring between 50 meters and 11 kilometers across, scar the landscape from New Jersey to Florida. In samples taken from 15 of the features, Howard and his colleagues found iridium-rich magnetic grains and carbon spherules with tiny diamond fragments similar to those found at Clovis archaeological sites.

The long axes of the great majority of the Carolina Bays point toward locations near the Great Lakes and in Canada—a hint that the extraterrestrial object disintegrated over those locales, says Howard.e correlation between the Carolina Bays and this comet/asteroid event:

FWIW, I had no idea that there were nearly a million of those elongated crater features known as "Carolina Bays"...

69 posted on 01/01/2009 10:17:00 PM PST by TXnMA ("Allah": Satan's current alias...!!)
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To: TXnMA

He has a website with some maps, and the longitudinal features mapped out. (about a quarter of the way down the page).

Looks like two loci for two separate events.

http://www.georgehoward.net/cbays.htm

Oddly, I last week took a bit of a fascination with this stuff, stirred up a bit by Yellowstone.


70 posted on 01/01/2009 10:46:05 PM PST by djf (< Tagline closed until further notice. Awaiting bailout >)
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To: TXnMA; Coyoteman; djf; blam; SunkenCiv
Ice Age Ends Smashingly: Did a comet blow up over eastern Canada?

Here's a better link for the excerpt in comment 69.

71 posted on 01/01/2009 11:03:43 PM PST by neverdem (Xin loi minh oi)
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To: org.whodat; TXnMA; SunkenCiv; All

“it is not supported by fossil records.”

I strongly urge you to read Firestone’s book. It does a very good job of describing the careful scientific process by which the scientists who wrote the book collaborated in examining a number of different types of evidence from different sub-branches of science to develop the book. They also traveled thousands of miles to examine the evidence, all of which points to the idea that something terrible came out of the heavens 13,000 years ago, and triggered the Younger Dryas world wide cooling. It is well written for a non-technical but educated reader.


72 posted on 01/01/2009 11:33:27 PM PST by gleeaikin
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To: djf; SunkenCiv; blam; Coyoteman; All

“Looks like two loci for two separate events.”

Actually, it looks as if there were 4 subevents in Canada, and 3 near Lake Michigan. Also if you go down further in the article there is a chart of temperature changes in Greenland. There you can see a profound and long dip that is the YOunger Dryas, but coming down from the temperature high around 15 thousand years ago (15KYA) there are three downward spikes that might represent less lethal events of the same type. So, given the 7 sub-loci, perhaps several occurred at each of these drops in temperature, until at the third one the Gulf Stream circulation was permanently disturbed for a thousand years.

Since bays overlap each other in several cases, if some can be found where the orientation is somewhat different, it might be very interesting to analyze material to determine if there was a different date for each.


73 posted on 01/02/2009 12:09:47 AM PST by gleeaikin
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To: neverdem; All

Here is another interesting link about happenings in April 2008. Loud noises, earthquakes, lights in our mid-West, and in Argentina, with odd government explanations:

http://www.sott.net/articles/show/154007-Impact-Hazards-on-a-Populated-Earth-


74 posted on 01/02/2009 12:19:26 AM PST by gleeaikin
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To: SunkenCiv

My, my, my. A catastrophe 13,000 years ago? How novel.


75 posted on 01/02/2009 6:31:50 AM PST by CholeraJoe (Don't it make you want to rock 'n roll all night long? Mohammed's radio.)
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To: EBH
The figure 13,000 years ago stuck out like a sore thumb as it is recorded in the Mayan calender

It did to me, as well. As did the article posted a couple of weeks ago about the potential for a magnetic pole shift.

76 posted on 01/02/2009 12:09:00 PM PST by IYAS9YAS (Hey Obama, why lawyer up when you can pony up? Show us your vault copy BC)
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To: IYAS9YAS

Yes, someone had posted a video that describes the earth crossing the galactic equator around or beginning in 2008. They associate crossing the galactic equator with a pole shift or magnetic disturbances, a debris field, etc.


77 posted on 01/02/2009 3:20:09 PM PST by EBH ( Directive 10-289)
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To: neverdem
Now a team of scientists says it has found new evidence that an object from space caused a similar extinction event only 13,000 years ago.

Has George Bush been around that long?

78 posted on 01/02/2009 4:16:43 PM PST by xJones
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To: EBH
Yes, someone had posted a video that describes the earth crossing the galactic equator around or beginning in 2008. They associate crossing the galactic equator with a pole shift or magnetic disturbances, a debris field, etc.

From the mid-Atlantic rift zone records (5000 paleomagnetic earth scientists can't be wrong!), it would appear that the earth's magnetic field can die down within a scant 5000 years, and then start back up with reversed polarity. And the earth's magnetic field has decreased some 25% in the last 150 years since such measurements have been regularly taken.

I wouldn't worry about it, Obama has the answer, and Al Gore is his prophet.:)

79 posted on 01/02/2009 4:31:31 PM PST by xJones
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To: ozzymandus
Only 20 days left to say “Bush’s Fault!”

Nope! Every time we look at the new president, we'll say, "Bush's fault!!!"

80 posted on 01/02/2009 7:32:56 PM PST by night reader (NRA Life Member since 1962)
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