17 Kasım 2012 Cumartesi

New Meteorite Crater South of Haiti

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This is speculative of course, but the hard fact remains that a cometimpacted on the crust from the North Pole traveling south in orderto shift the crust itself. It came in almost tangentially, enteringthe atmosphere over Siberia, passing though the ice cap exploding icedebris along its path that formed the Carolina bays of note and thenimpacted south at forty degrees degrees south of the then Pole in Hudson Bay. Thisoccurred 12,900 BP and triggered the Younger Dryas and the end of theIce Age.
This possible discovery certainly works for us. It is good to seethe data slowly been assembled. Once again, the theory tells youwere to look.
This also tells us that the shock wave expanded West and East in theatmosphere up to the Rocky Mountains and out over the Atlantic andthat little could have survived. Every tree would have been knockeddown and elemental carbon would have been dumped over everything.

New Meteorite Crater Discovered South of Haiti
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1,2012
http://frontiers-of-anthropology.blogspot.ca/2012/11/new-meteorite-crater-discovered-south.html

I had an interestingletter recently from Brian Marcks in which he pointed out a submergedstructure he found with the help of Google and which looked to him asthough it might be a meteorite crater. the important part of hismessage follows:

I used theGoogle Satellite Map and followed the trajectory of the crater andscars eastward along the orbit path. Then I found the 80 km craterjust off the coast of Haiti.

Thus, I think we maybe dealing with a Schumaker-Levy comet breakup scenario. Also, theHaiti crater lines up with the long axes of some of the CarolinaBay craters in South Carolina, Georgia and southern North Carolina. Isubmitted the information on the crater and my hypothesis to thePASSC Database for Earth Impact craters.
Brian Marcks 


New 80 km underseacrater South of Haiti submitted by Brian Marcks, at far right

Brian hassuggested the name "Comet Atlan" for the name of theYounger Dryas impacting body.

His description ofa comet breaking up and falling to Earth in pieces fits some of theevidence, but so far the chunks of meteorite we have recovered fromthis event have been mostly metallic or mineral in nature, so anasteroid still might be a better choice: we also might be dealingwith a swarm of different bodies of different nature travellingtogether, both stony and icy, but which would be described as a cometto ground observers. This has also been suggested in some cometaryswarm scenarios, Marcks and I were also discussing Donnelly's bookRAGNAROK in connection to the impact scenario.

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