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originally posted by: Solvedit
originally posted by: Hooke
The evidence seems to show that, despite the possibly misleading nature of its appearance, Bimini Road is of natural origin:
You overlooked something major. From the Wikipedia page on beach rock:
"The main processes involved in the cementation are : supersaturation with CaCO3 through direct evaporation of seawater, groundwater CO2 degassing in the vadose zone, mixing of marine and meteoric water fluxes and precipitation of micritic calcium carbonate as a byproduct of microbiological activity."
originally posted by: Harte
See, there's a reason they call it beach rock.
Harte
originally posted by: Hanslune
One of the things I researched while working on the site of Kalavassos in Cyprus was the opium trade in the Med. It left hundreds of thousands of small brown jars all over the Med. If they were trading in the Americas - where are these jars?
originally posted by: Solvedit
originally posted by: Hanslune
One of the things I researched while working on the site of Kalavassos in Cyprus was the opium trade in the Med. It left hundreds of thousands of small brown jars all over the Med. If they were trading in the Americas - where are these jars?
If you were trading across the Atlantic in an old fashioned ship which could barely make it, would you use up 3/4 of your cargo capacity with packaging?
I think you are mixing up jars with small jars.
originally posted by: Byrd
originally posted by: Solvedit
originally posted by: Hanslune
One of the things I researched while working on the site of Kalavassos in Cyprus was the opium trade in the Med. It left hundreds of thousands of small brown jars all over the Med. If they were trading in the Americas - where are these jars?
If you were trading across the Atlantic in an old fashioned ship which could barely make it, would you use up 3/4 of your cargo capacity with packaging?
In fact, that was the best form of packaging for that day.
originally posted by: Solvedit
I think you are mixing up jars with small jars.
There would be a savings of space and weight if they did not break the product up into small amounts with their own jar.
originally posted by: Solvedit
originally posted by: Harte
See, there's a reason they call it beach rock.
Harte
Exactly. So why do people think it is a natural formation?
It could not have formed in place because the last time the seafloor around it was above the surface was 12,000 years ago, during the last ice age.
It was underwater then, and it was 2700-2800 years ago.
originally posted by: Harte
originally posted by: Solvedit
originally posted by: Harte
See, there's a reason they call it beach rock.
Harte
Exactly. So why do people think it is a natural formation?
It could not have formed in place because the last time the seafloor around it was above the surface was 12,000 years ago, during the last ice age.
Truth is, the natural beach rock formed around 2,000 years ago IIRC.
originally posted by: Solvedit
It was underwater then, and it was 2700-2800 years ago.
originally posted by: Harte
originally posted by: Solvedit
originally posted by: Harte
See, there's a reason they call it beach rock.
Harte
Exactly. So why do people think it is a natural formation?
It could not have formed in place because the last time the seafloor around it was above the surface was 12,000 years ago, during the last ice age.
Truth is, the natural beach rock formed around 2,000 years ago IIRC.
Beach rock doesn't form underwater.