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Ancient Atomic Warfare - Religious texts and geological evidence
New York Herald Tribune on February 16, 1947 ^
| New York Herald Tribune on February 16, 1947
| Ivan T. Sanderson
Posted on 07/22/2002 2:01:00 PM PDT by vannrox
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An old read. But fun and interesting never the less.
1
posted on
07/22/2002 2:01:01 PM PDT
by
vannrox
To: vannrox
but most LDG exists in smaller, angular pieces--looking like shards left when a giant green bottle was smashed by colossal forces. Barfight of the Titans!
2
posted on
07/22/2002 2:07:21 PM PDT
by
Pistias
To: vannrox
The byproduct of the first atomic bomb is the original man-made mineral: Trinitite, named for the Trinity blast.
To: vannrox
Kinda dovetails with Zecharia Sitchin's theories.....
To: vannrox
bttt
5
posted on
07/22/2002 2:16:23 PM PDT
by
Don Myers
To: vannrox
Obviously formed when a Gao'uld mother ship attacked Earth 10,500 years ago...
6
posted on
07/22/2002 2:16:53 PM PDT
by
pabianice
To: vannrox
Rather than evidence of an atomic past, I think it may be evidence of a time-traveling future, which means we now have a time-traveling past and present, which is all very confusing.
7
posted on
07/22/2002 2:21:03 PM PDT
by
dead
To: Pistias
"These corridors or "streets" have a rubbly surface, rather like that of a "speedway" track, formed by angular gravel and red loamy weathering debris overlying Nubian sandstone"
Could have been a bar fight. After somebody lost big shekels on the Sahara 500 stock chariot race. parsy.
8
posted on
07/22/2002 2:21:09 PM PDT
by
parsifal
To: vannrox
an incredible heat output of ninety-three degrees Celsius. This is five times the previous hottest temperature for a contained gas and is twice the minimum heat needed for fusion, but it was held only for one fifty-millionth of a second instead of the one full second which would be required. A whole 93C...wow. Whoops, gotta go--the fusion torch on my stove is doing a number on my soup...
9
posted on
07/22/2002 2:21:31 PM PDT
by
Pistias
To: pabianice
Those Celts really got around! ;-)
To: dead
Maybe we're all on some sort of reel to reel do-loop, and God just hasn't gotten around to changing the tape yet...
11
posted on
07/22/2002 2:24:35 PM PDT
by
TADSLOS
To: Don Myers
Bump
12
posted on
07/22/2002 2:27:00 PM PDT
by
Mark17
To: vannrox
Hey, vannrox - heve you been to Nexus Magazine? Although they have some rather tinfoil articles in there, I saw this there some time ago. I'd like it if you would check out
this article as well. Your opinion on it would be welcome - as would any others willing to read through all three parts.....
13
posted on
07/22/2002 2:27:02 PM PDT
by
11B3
To: vannrox
I don't know if this theory is true, but if it is they'll find some way to blame it on the Republicans.
To: vannrox
Fantastic reading....thanks for the post.
15
posted on
07/22/2002 2:27:34 PM PDT
by
Icthus
To: vannrox
Bump for a later read. Thanks.
16
posted on
07/22/2002 2:31:24 PM PDT
by
MattinNJ
To: Pistias
A whole 93C...wow. Whoops, gotta go--the fusion torch on my stove is doing a number on my soup... Hot stuff. And I bet you left it running for more than a second, too...
To: pabianice
Obviously formed when a Gao'uld mother ship attacked Earth 10,500 years ago Seems like overkill for conquering an 8000 BC civilization. Although maybe the Asgard had a base here...
To: vannrox
Meteor Clue To End Of Middle East Civilisations Found
The Telegraph of London
11-4-01 Scientists have found the first evidence that a devastating meteor impact in the Middle East might have triggered the mysterious collapse of civilisations more than 4,000 years ago.
Studies of satellite images of southern Iraq have revealed a two-mile-wide circular depression which scientists say bears all the hallmarks of an impact crater. If confirmed, it would point to the Middle East being struck by a meteor with the violence equivalent to hundreds of nuclear bombs.
Today's crater lies on what would have been shallow sea 4,000 years ago, and any impact would have caused devastating fires and flooding.
The catastrophic effect of these could explain the mystery of why so many early cultures went into sudden decline around 2300 BC.
...snip...
The crater also appears to be, in geological terms, very recent. Dr Master said: "The sediments in this region are very young, so whatever caused the crater-like structure, it must have happened within the past 6,000 years."
Reporting his finding in the latest issue of the journal Meteoritics & Planetary Science, Dr Master suggests that a recent meteor impact is the most plausible explanation for the structure.
A survey of the crater itself could reveal tell-tale melted rock. "If we could find fragments of impact glass, we could date them using radioactive dating techniques," he said.
Rense
To: vannrox
its a cool sci-fi premise :) But really.. trinitite contains radioactivity.. even if the radioactivity had faded away, there would still be traces of the heavy isotopes locked within the glass.. Unless perhaps, it was an ultra clean blast like that of tsar bomba..
20
posted on
07/22/2002 3:21:23 PM PDT
by
aSkeptic
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