The authors say they've shown that the spherules are identical to rock found in southern Quebec. "What is exciting in our paper is that we have for the first time narrowed down the region where a Younger Dryas impact did take place," says Sharma, "even though we have not yet found its crater" (http://tinyurl.com/mnmxboz).
But their case isn't air tight. "The tiny spherules from New Jersey and Pennsylvania, analyzed by Sharma and his colleagues, have never been accurately dated, Sharma admits. They could be several thousands years older than the widespread glacial event" (Yahoo article).
1 posted on
09/02/2013 4:43:48 PM PDT by
rjbemsha
To: SunkenCiv
2 posted on
09/02/2013 4:45:48 PM PDT by
Perdogg
(Cruz-Paul 2016)
To: rjbemsha
Iroquois Legend:
“About this time the northern nations formed a confederacy
[centuries before the formation of the Iroquois Confederacy]
and seated a great council fire on the river St. Lawrence;
the northern nations possessed the bank of the great lakes;
the countries of the north were plenty of beavers,
but the hunters were often opposed by big snakes.
The people live on the south side of the Big Lakes make
bread of roots and obtain a kind of potatoes and beans found on the rich soil.
...A BLAZING STAR [my caps] fell into a fort situated on the St. Lawrence and destroyed the people;
this event was considered as a warning of their destruction. After a time a war broke out among the northern nations which continued
until they had utterly destroyed each other, the island again became in possession of fierce animals.
-Bonaparte, Darren, “Creation and Confederation”
3 posted on
09/02/2013 4:59:35 PM PDT by
bunkerhill7
(("The Second Amendment has no limits on firepower"-NY State Senator Kathleen A. Marchione.))
To: rjbemsha
Actually it was a comet with multiple boulders that strafed that portion of North America.A crater like the one in Arizona dose not exist because it was air burst over mile thick Laurentide ice sheet. It was kind of like the one that exploded over Russia last Winter but it had over a mile of ice under it.
The crater in Arizona was made by a single iron meteor and it ablated its way to earth in a different way.
5 posted on
09/02/2013 5:51:53 PM PDT by
Bogie
To: rjbemsha
To: rjbemsha
14 posted on
09/02/2013 7:03:01 PM PDT by
Bogie
To: rjbemsha
15 posted on
09/02/2013 7:06:09 PM PDT by
Bogie
To: rjbemsha
The tiny particles from New Jersey and Pennsylvania, analyzed by Sharma and his colleagues, have never been accurately dated, Sharma admits. They could be several thousands years older than the widespread glacial event. "We are assuming they are Younger Dryas So they haven't dated the sphericals, they are only assuming they are from the Younger Dryas,
You know what happen when you ASSume
16 posted on
09/02/2013 7:09:15 PM PDT by
qam1
(There's been a huge party. All plates and the bottles are empty, all that's left is the bill to pay)
To: rjbemsha
**though no crater of the right age has ever been found.**
Perhaps because the crater was in the ice pack that flowed away?
17 posted on
09/02/2013 7:25:09 PM PDT by
Salvation
("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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