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One theory believes that the Neanderthals and modern humans cohabited as recently as 26,000 years ago. M S S Murthy looks at the questions of extinction that arise from that.
The 'extinct' human
Excavations into the Australian swamp of Lancefield show that a bone bed dated at 26,000 years ago contains perhaps 10,000 giant extinct animals. Associated artifacts suggest that humans were in the area, but the direct cause of death of the animals is, on present evidence, not explicable. Such a recent date for the classic megafauna shows that it was living together with humans for at least 7000 years in southeast Australia. This enduring association argues against a catastrophic and rapid overkill in the Australian Pleistocene.
Lancefield Swamp and the Extinction of the Australian Megafauna
The extinction of the Australian megafauna is presently one of the most hotly contested debates in Australian Quaternary sciences. [Roberts et al., 2001. U-series and ESR analyses of bones and teeth relating to the human burials from Skhul. Journal of Human Evolution. 49, 316–334.] proposed contentiously that the megafauna went extinct within a short time period somewhere in the range of 39,000–52,000 years ago. Being tucked away at the continental fringe, Kangaroo Island offers an ideal refuge for the megafauna for survival.
A cautionary tale from down under: Dating the BlackCreek Swamp megafauna site on Kangaroo Island, South Australia
Scaling up from smaller eruptions is all the experts can do, too, since no one in recorded history has ever seen a supereruption. (The last one, depending on whose definition of supereruption you use, was either 26,500 or 74,000 years ago.) "It's very difficult to forecast quite what would happen, because it would be of a scale we just have no experience of," says Stephen Sparks, a volcanologist at Bristol University in England.
The Next Big One
Originally posted by ChemBreather
this is all good, and ofcours all the things pointing to the fact that solaris is moving down thru the galactic plane and the Oort cloud dosnt help the matter much..
Have look at this one, it has been posted here before, but I want to add it to the current discussion as it holds evidence pointing to the Exact same event. Melted sand (glass) on the moon is an ultimate proof that this has happend and might as well be happening now,.
Link here
One should read both parts. Very nice reading ...
Originally posted by dee132423
From what I unsderstand what occurs every 26,000 years is the precession of equinoxes whch basically just means completing a rotation we have smaller cycles of precession also.I don't really get the whole dark rift theory if it is talking about the black hole at the center of the galaxy it would have no affect on earth even if we were in exact alignment with it.Only what enters a bhs event horizon feels the affect.
Popo is one of the most active volcanoes in Mexico. The Aztecs recorded eruptions of Popo in the years 1347 and 1354, and there have been at least 15 eruptions since the Spanish arrived in 1519. Most of the eruptions in the past 600 years have been relatively mild. However, geologists have found evidence that more destructive eruptions in 14,000 BC and in 23,000 BC threw large amounts of ash as far away as Mexico City, as well as causing avalanches. The last major Plinian eruptions were in 400 BC and 822 AD.
Mt Popo
It began, according to archeological evidence, with an earthquake—a shift in the deep-lying Miocene limestone basement of the Aegean that somehow altered the balance of huge underground forces. Earthquakes are a common phenomenon in much of the Near and Middle East (Aramco World, May-June, 1971) and Santorin has the misfortune of lying above the intersection of two geologic faults. At this spot the volcano had been rebuilding itself after its last great eruption sometime around 23,000 B.C.,
Santorini
Around 23,000 BC, during the cataclysms that marked the forelast shift of the earth's poles, an explosion of incredible magnitude formed the gigantic Batur caldera which today has a diameter of ca. 13 km - one of the largest and most impressive in the world. Before that eruption Mt Batur rose about 3,800 m above sea level and it was thus higher than Mt Agung (3,142 m / 10,308 feet).
Batur Volcano
Originally posted by Phage
reply to post by LDragonFire
As I pointed out the dark rift is far too distant to have any affect on the Earth.
Originally posted by Phage
reply to post by LDragonFire
As I pointed out the dark rift is far too distant to have any affect on the Earth.
Originally posted by LDragonFire
Originally posted by Phage
reply to post by LDragonFire
As I pointed out the dark rift is far too distant to have any affect on the Earth.
I disagree with you about this. All you have to do is look at any image of the Galaxy and see it is a flat spinning spiral, and to say it's gravitational forces will not affect us is wishful thinking at best.