Page 3 - "What could have caused the Artic Sea and the Pacific Ocean to irrupt and wash away forests with all their animal population and throw the entire mingled mass in great heaps scattered all over Alaska, the coast of which is no longer the Atlantic seaboard from Newfoundland to Florida?
Was it not a tectonic revolution in the earth's crust, that also caused the volcano's to erupt and to cover the peninsula with ashes?
In various levels of the muck, stone artifacts were found 'frozen in situ at great depths and in apparent association' with the Ice Age fauna, which implies that 'men were contemporary with extinct animals in Alaska.'
Thanks for that Fred! I’m now on my third reading of EIU. I have come to find that “V” was into serious economy of words for his writing style. For a boomer like myself, comprehension skills have suffered a great deal and “V” can’t be read like your typical novel. At times EVERY sentence in a paragraph; not just the first, is important to the overall message he is imparting. In any case, third time’s the charm I hope.
So true, I remember taking a geology class at University, the professor said that geological upheaval takes thousands of years to occur, I was like really, then explain Mt. Saint Helens and various earthquakes, while small, they can occur in an instant with devastating results, not to mention landslides and tsunamis that can result, the earth is a rather violent place as of late, I firmly believe geological change on a major scale can occur in an instant, my professor made it sound as if nothing occurs suddenly, BS, I still believe San Andreas could fling California like a rubber band north towards Alaska. Heck not to mention the Canary Islands dropping off into the ocean, causing a huge tsunami to rush towards New York, similar to the one that hit Indonesia after an earthquake. College professors are so holier than though no wonder they’re all liberals, God can change the earth in an instant, he doesn’t abide by man’s clock.