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Search results for: mammoth in all categories
329 results found.
33 pages of results. 211. Monitor [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... , still in the realms of speculation, but one speculation, notable by its absence, is pole tilt Ice Age Survivors (New Scientist, 13.11.04, p. 17) Some species of large ice age' mammal appear to have survived the general extinction, reappearing almost simultaneously more than a thousand years later. ' Mammoths lasted on Wrangel Island until 4,000 years ago and Musk Oxen and the giant Irish Elk reappeared in Siberia, lasting there another 1,000 - 2,000 years. Of course, there might be something wrong with carbon dating, but the evidence is that the original population crash around 11,000 years ago was catastrophic ...
212. Monitor [Journals] [SIS Review]
... around the equator, although it too has polar auroras. This pattern is very similar to that of x-rays from the Sun. Another surprise (! ) is that Saturn's ring system does not reflect x-rays at all. It seems that Jupiter and Saturn are very different and cannot simply be classified together as the gas giants'. GEOLOGY British Mammoth (Daily Mail, 21.1 .04. p. 11) A large mammoth skull has been found in a gravel pit in Gloucestershire. This is only the second one to be found in Britain. It is dated to 50,000 years ago, conveniently in the middle of an interglacial period', and readers will ...
213. Chapter VII: The Earth [The Age of Velikovsky] [Books]
... changes. Sullivan may believe that anyone can satisfy himself about all past events by reading his book, but a review of more objective scientific literature demonstrates that all odd geologic formations cannot be explained by invoking plate tectonics. (In our conversation and in his book, Sullivan also claimed that there was absolutely nothing unusual about the demise of any mammoth. Although catastrophists as well as uniformitarians entertain certain common misconceptions about the mammoths, not all of the evidence is explainable by uniformity. For those interested in investigating both sides of this issue, Cardona has written an excellent review article.) 14 For a number of years, Ager has taught geology, mainly uniformitarian style, at the ...
214. Noah's Vessel: 24,000 Deadweight Tons [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... arranging them so that except for Britain's henges, they won't topple in high velocity currents? Can this particular flood explain the formation of crustacean borings on the sides of the great pyramid in Giza. Can the extreme cold Noah experienced the year after the flood relate to extra-terrestrial sourced ices and gases streaming in at the magnetic poles and freezing giant mammoths from the inside out, in their tracks, as they munched happily on their buttercups near what is now the North Pole? Does the presence of this one nautical artifact bear witness to the accuracy of ancient literature describing the periodic orbital interference with Earth by the planet Mars? Mars' orbital interference with Earth is a possibility raised for ...
215. A Tale Of Two Venuses [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... Evidence," The Velikovskian, Vol. II, No. 4, (1994), p. 81, and "C . Leinert, et.al, "The Zodiacal Light From 1.0 to 0.3 a.u . as observed by the Helios Space 34. Charles Ginenthal, "The Extinction of the Mammoth," The Velikovskian, Vol. III, Nos. 2-3, (1997), p. 280. 35. Probes," Astron. Astrophys., Vol. 103, (1981), pp. 177-188. 36. Charles Ginenthal, "The Extinction of the Mammoth," The Velikovskian Vol. 111, Nos ...
... works, strangely enough, appeared at the same time that Immanuel was editing Weizmann's pamphlet on hydrocarbons and was conceiving of manna and petroleum as being twin products of the cometary Venus. (28) On August 31, MacKie wrote to Velikovsky to apologize for his remarks in the January 11 New Scientist. He had written that Velikovsky's dating of mammoths to as recently as 1500 B.C . was an example of an unconfirmed advance claim, since radiocarbon methods indicated times in excess of 12,000 years ago. But MacKie had just learned of mammoth bones from Tettenhausen, Bavaria, that had been dated to the end of the third millennium B.C . "The dates ...
217. A Failed Excursion to the Caves of Aquitaine [Books] [de Grazia books]
... when others do not. Magdalenian III, IV, V are often clumped together; some argue this is an effect of seismism, others that warmth may have cracked and caused rock overhangs to fall. Water action, too, is blamed. But also some say there were no plural periods. The walls of Ruffignac contain two groups of mammoths marching towards each other. They exhibit a fine sense of order, a disciplined composition. Elsewhere a parade of mammoths is overdrawn by serpentine lines. At Ruffignac, all corridors are very soft and wet, both floors and walls. One senses big water nearby. If in historic times, as reported, a flood covered the first ...
218. Monitor. C&C Review 2002:1 [Journals] [SIS Review]
... to be 1 36 Myrs old, the earliest evidence for humans in the region; and tools found in East Anglia have been dated by their sediments to around 600,000 years, making early humans living in Britain up to 200,000 years earlier than previously thought. Up in Russia's Arctic regions more tools, bones and an incised mammoth tusk indicate that either modern humans or Neanderthals were well adapted to the region and carbon dating of the tusk and plant remains says that they are more than 30,000 years old, at least 15,000 years older than when man was thought to have first lived so far north. (To explain the plants it has to ...
219. On the Disproportion between Geological Time and Historical Time. Part Two - of Earth, Fire and Water [Journals] [SIS Review]
... this time. Millions of trees in low-lying Norfolk were flattened, with their tops all facing north-east. Extensive beds of similarly oriented tress are also found in the north of England, in Ireland and Scotland [81]. Prodigious numbers of dismembered animal bones and uprooted trees were scattered across northern and western parts of Alaska. Great herds of mammoth and rhinoceros drowned on the islands that now fringe the Arctic ice cap. Mammoths in the then temperate clime of northern Siberia were plunged into temperatures that froze them to death within days [82]. Winds dessicated the Sahara and eroded its rocks, sweeping sand over valleys that had not long previously resounded with rushing water [83] ...
220. Science, Technology and the Chronology of the Ancient World [Journals] [Aeon]
... ." [16] However, there is, at present, no justification for such an unequivocal conclusion. Lynn E. Rose. (Photograph- 1996- by Dwardu Cardona.) As with Sothic dating, many revisionists question the basis of radiocarbon dating, and Ginenthal did so in 1997 in his book, The Extinction of the Mammoth. However, in Pillars of the Past he takes a somewhat different line. Although he accuses orthodox historians of double standards because they tend to ignore individual results that fall outside the expected range, he nevertheless joins them in believing that the radiocarbon dates of wood samples, taken as a whole, are meaningful. With characteristic honesty, ...
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