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26,000 years ago, humanity went through a genetic "bottle neck". By studying mutations in our DNA that have amassed over the course of thousands of years, scientists found we are ALL descendants of a group of humans that number around 20,000.
An extinction happened 26,000 years ago. By looking at the ice cores in Antartica, we can see a stellar event happened 26,000 years ago. (Unusual amounts of tin, gold, silver, and irridium)
The distance from the galactic center to Earth is 26,000 light years.
One star orbiting the Supermassive Black Hole (Sgr A*) at the center of Milky Way is named 14 Sgr, or Sgr 1900+14 . The width of its orbit is only 2 light DAYS. The next time it passes Sgr A* at its perigee (closest approach) is December 21, 2012.
Remember, the light we see from the galatic center is 26,000 years old. This orbit has already happened.
300 years ago, the galactic center was more active. An event occured and the light reflected off of an object 300 light years away from Sgr A*, named The Large Magellanic Cloud. We saw this just recently with our tellescopes.
This event took place 25,700 years ago.
300 years ago, Norther Europe was thrown into a "Mini Ice Age". The Thames River, in England, would freeze solid every year, to the point that city fairs took place on the river.
This was the begining of the coalescence of 14 Sgr and Sgr A*, ending with their union on 12/21/2012.
26,000 yeras ago, modern man witnessed the coalescence of two black holes, and saw the Earth burned and shaken. As the fire ball rose above the galactic center some 60,000 light years into the sky, both hevan and Earth shook and both humans and animals collapsed.
After the smoke cleared, thoes who were left looked up to see, to their shock.... everything was as it was before! Like nothing happened! Their quest for an answer gave birth to astronomy.
A gamma-ray burst in the Milky Way, if close enough to Earth and beamed towards it, could have significant effects on the biosphere. The absorption of radiation in the atmosphere would cause photodissociation of nitrogen, generating nitric oxide that would act as a catalyst to destroy ozone.[75] According to a 2004 study, a GRB at a distance of about a kiloparsec (3,262 light-years) could destroy up to half of Earth's ozone layer; the direct UV irradiation from the burst combined with additional solar UV radiation passing through the diminished ozone layer could then have potentially significant impacts on the food chain and potentially trigger a mass extinction.[2][76] The authors estimate that one such burst is expected per billion years, and hypothesize that the Ordovician-Silurian extinction event could have been the result of such a burst, although there is no current evidence to support this idea.
Originally posted by SystemResistor
reply to post by curious7
I don't know much about iridium, it could be one of the many different kinds of charged particle that buffets the atmosphere.
Basically, the Earth could be hit with a massive wave of radiation and charged particles, it might explain the Chemtrail atmospheric shielding, and alterations of the Earth's electric field through HAARP, as well as all the so-called "ascention" or "higher density" rhetorics.
Originally posted by SystemResistor
An event occured and the light reflected off of an object 300 light years away from Sgr A*, named The Large Magellanic Cloud. We saw this just recently with our tellescopes.
This event took place 25,700 years ago.