Posted on 10/07/2019 9:42:49 AM PDT by BenLurkin
Perhaps what was meant was giant forms of the buffalos, zebras, and wildebeest. Europe had the giant cattle, the Orauchs (sp?), that has gone extinct, the giant cave bear, dire wolves and deer all gone.
I think it's just the natural tendency of humans to cling to whatever paradigm they've been indoctrinated into. That brings to mind an old quote: "Science advances one funeral at a time."
Was it Max Planck who said it?
I have seen examples of cave art from 10 or 11 kya. It is far inferior to the quality of cave art from 20 and 30 kya in the French caves.
I think it was our own Sunken Civ... lol
I have heard it many times but never was sure who said it first. :)
That is a fact, I have made that same point myself many times.
The cave art discussion is always an interesting one. I agree.
But part of this landscape is the fact that society has ‘rebooted’ on numerous occasions (because of continuing meteor strikes on the Earth). And eventually, another catastrophic event will occur, and we will reboot again.
Adding to the discussion....this last strike (12,900 years ago) now brings out the discussion item that maybe more than 75-percent of the animal species at the time were wiped out. So you look around the wonder about things.
How did man survive this period? It’s not fully explained yet. I suspect that DNA will eventually piece together something that will give us more insight.
I think you're right, Max Planck.
Lol, Well I tried to give you credit for it... I think I have seen you use it a few times here and there. :)
Some of Foerster's videos show granite that looks absolutely fried. There are some large granite pillars and sculptures in Tanis, Egypt that look corroded, like acid had been thrown on them. It doesn't look like weathering to me, but I have no idea what could have caused that kind of damage to granite.
Nothing livens a conversation like a Max Planck quote. ;^)
Perhaps 75% of the living creatures might have been killed, but I doubt if very many species were eliminated. That 75% figure might be accurate for the Yucatan meteor 65mya, or 35% for the Chesapeake Meteor 34mya. But the species extinction seems to have been more for the large animals, rather than all the animals 12,900kya.
Radiation maybe?
What killed the Clovis people was the result of being bombarded for over 10 years with Taurid material some rocks were over one mile in diameter. The ‘shower’ continued with decreasing intensity for the next 100 years.
The resulting impact splatter - huge ice chunks falling from 10s of thousands of feet impacting the ground and shattering like billions of ice knives shredding everything in their paths - vegetation, animals, people. The good news is these huge quantities of water extinguished the fire storms that had been raging across the continent for years from the initial impacts. North America south of the Ice Sheet was essentially fried. There is archeological, paleontological, geological (and other disciplines) evidence for all of this. Metal deposits just add to the evidence.
See the later half of Graham Hancock’s “America Before”.
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