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Search results for: mammoth? in all categories
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... faunal types proceeded! 30 The Arctic rocks tell of a more wonderful lost Atlantis than Plato's. The fossil ivory beds of Siberia excel everything of the kind in the world. From the days of Pliny, at least, they have constantly been undergoing exploitation, and still they are the chief headquarters of supply.31 The remains of the mammoth are so abundant that, as Gratacap says, " the northern islands of Siberia seem built up of its crowded bones" 31 Another scientific writer, speaking of the islands of New Siberia, northward of the mouth of the river Lena, uses this language: " Large quantities of ivory are dug out of the ground every year. ...
102. The Scars Of Mars Part II [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... . The ice began to descend, or sift down, in volumes of 5 to 6 million cubic miles of ice per vortex, one over Northern Canada and Northern Europe, and the other over the edge of Antarctica, facing Australia and New Zealand. The ice sifted down at temperatures of perhaps -200 degrees or even -256 degrees F. Mammoths and rhinoceroses in Northern Siberia were drowned by the sudden flood waters surging in from the Arctic Ocean (then a warm body of water). Those that survived were enveloped in the extreme sub-zero winds blowing off the ice dump in Northern Europe or Alaska. One breath and their lungs were frozen- along with their breakfast, sometimes in ...
103. Mechanics of the Great Deluge [Books]
... is the way the surface materials of the earth are wrecked when the earth careens, and the materials pass through the earth's bulge and then rearrange themselves again to conform to the centrifugal force of rotation which causes the bulge, and to the gravitational pressures which cause the earth to be spherical. We find that animals have been tossed about (mammoths in Siberia) and torn apart (mammoths, bison, and other animals in Alaska), trees broken off at ground level and denuded of limbs (Yellowstone National Park, and elsewhere), and both animals and trees have been buried in the ground which later has become hardpan and rock. The evidence indicates a super hurricane and ...
104. Science Frontiers [Journals] [SIS Review]
... VOL. G-1 VOL. G-2. ASTRONOMY SERIES Lights on the moon, intramercurial planets, moon of Venus, enigmatic objects, telescopic meteors, sunspots and the planets, lightning on the moon, small earth moons, etc. VOL. A-1 VOL. A-2. GEOLOGY SERIES Mima Mounds, Carolina Bays and oriented lakes, terrestrial catastrophism, mammoth graveyards, musical sands, submarine canyons, Ice Age paradoxes, magnetic reversals, and much more. VOL. E-1 VOL. E-2 BIOLOGY SERIES Mammoths' recent survival, wolf children, sea and lake monsters, cat conclaves, singing foxes and mice, rain trees, giant snakes, porcupine men, the yeti, ant butter, ...
105. The Paleo-Saturnian System [Journals] [Aeon]
... another question: If the atmosphere was concentrated in one hemisphere, would the other hemisphere have been left with enough atmosphere to sustain and protect plant and animal life? There are other problems. The Ice Ages: To my understanding, no one can deny the ice ages, especially the last one. How, for instance, were the mammoths of Earth's northern regions- thousands of years old- covered with permafrost within hours of their death? Had these beasts been exposed to the elements for even a few days, they would have been subject to decay and scavenging. Yet the remains of these mammoths, including the one discovered in 1999, were perfectly preserved. Also, ...
106. Monitor [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... were the survivors, 130 million years ago, of a global catastrophe which killed off all or most of the larger dinosaurs of the time. It is interesting to see the late Jurassic/early Cretaceous extinctions viewed (in orthodox circles) as part of a global event... or is this an incorrect report? Problem of Frozen Mammoths sources: New Scientist 28.7 .90, pp. 47-51; National Geographic August 1990, p. 28 Dale Guthrie, author of Frozen fauna of the mammoth steppe, gives new insight into the problem of the frozen mammoths. He points out that the frozen carcasses are actually mummies, freeze dried by the natural desiccation processes ...
... small kangaroo, whose teeth were found in a fissure near Wells, containing Rhaetic beds. In the Avon gorge were remains of great fossil lizards, and at Street, near Glastonbury, in the Lower Lias, other fossils of gigantic lizards, including the pleisaurus and ichtyosaurus or fish lizard, while the Mendip caves have yielded evidence of the mammoth, woolly rhinoceros, lion, tiger, bear, hyena and wild horse.1 In these and other parts of Britain proof of occupation by human beings also dates back to a remote period, but generally after a certain space of time their bones disintegrate into dust and so afford no data except when they can be definitely traced to ...
108. Monitor [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... that the Chinese distinguished "bushy stars" (= tailless comets) from "broom stars" (= tailed ones). The illustration from the silk book of the 168BC Han Tomb at Mawangdui, Hunan Province, shows a series of objects which are surprisingly similar to the cup and ring and ladder markings of western European megaliths. Recent Mammoth Extinction?source: THE EGYPTIAN GAZETTE 13.9 .24 Until recently, scientists have believed that the mammoth became extinct in Europe between 8000 and 13000 years ago, and was then confined to central and eastern Siberia. This belief has been refuted by the find of mammoth bones dated to 5000 years ago to the south of Arkhangelsk ...
... than all else is the assumption of inter-glacial periods, whereby after thousands of years of Polar climate there were semitropical interludes, necessary for the theory to explain away the evidence of fauna and flora. How these survived the Arctic Age is not explained. After the Drift, truly, certain genera of mammals and plants became extinct, like the mammoth, the woolly rhinoceros, the cave hyena, the Irish elk, etc., and plants like the sabal-palm, areca, and others. Yet sufficient survived to show a. supervening climate warmer than it is in the British Isles today, such as the olive and vine. If there had been even one such winter as James ...
... soil covers many Western States which were once covered by a vast inland sea. This sea was bounded on the west by the Rocky Mountains; ssouth by the Ozark Mountains and the mountains of Tennessee and Kentucky, and emptied its waters into Lake Michigan. This greal inland sea finally became a fresh-water body. The remains of the mastodon, mammoth and other pachyderms of interdiluvian times, as well as fresh water shells are found. It made for itself two great outlets, the Mississippi and the St. Lawrence rivers. This inland sea must have been elevated 700 or 800 feet above the ocean, and was surrounded on all sides by walls, and covered an area of at ...
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