A controversial new theory about the disappearance of Clovis man and 35 North American animal species is making waves in geology circles. Two University of Oregon anthropologists are part of a group of 26 who think a comet crashed into Earth 13,000 years ago, causing a major global freeze. Now all they have to do is prove it.
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I have spent four years determining the shapes of strangly shaped hot objects that have left their impressions on the Luderitz peninsula Namibia. They have seven arms and a central large cavity like an octopus. I think these things are baby galaxies. The concept of seven days must have an origin. The most common identifiable feature/print is the trinity mark the concept of god must have a point of origin.
I think fusion occurs on the sun in large bags.
Supernova explosions throw these fusion bags outwards and the process continues. The bags continue doing what they did on the sun. eventually clouting something along the way.
The inside of the bag has multitudes of smaller bags inside like a russian doll. So i disagree with the hypothesis that an explosion occurs. The heat centres are allready very well organized in a matrix. The heat centres then hit the earth like a shower of hot plasma bodies.
My proof is very simple. The granulation pattern found on the sun surface is the same as the pattern found on a tektite. A tektite is thus a small sun like body. A comet an old bag from an old sun.
I know Jon Erlandson.
I’ve crunched some numbers and if a chunk of supernova traveled 28,000 years across a couple of hundred light years and hit the planet, using the numbers from the Nova webpage, I estimate the object was traveling at about 1% of the speed of light (and the dust particles they found on the mammoth tusks would have been traveling at 5% of lightspeed). Now, do you really think something that survived a supernova explosion was affected by Earth’s very thin atmosphere? How about the other way around. It would have gone through the 70 or so miles of Earth’s atmosphere in less than a half of a second. At appox. Mach 8000. Paloelithic people in China would have looked up about 5 seconds after impact and said ‘what the hell was that?!?’ Impact crater? I think they should be looking for an exit hole on the other side of the planet.
I also don’t think they’ve taken into account that the (most likely) radioactive object would have hit a glacier and not dirt. How much deuterium/tritium could have been part of this object? How much possible Neutronium? Think of the implications of that. Paleolithic China Syndrome.