The Far East (Religion)

by Balance_Maintained @, U.S.A., Tuesday, September 21, 2010, 12:16 (4937 days ago) @ xeno6696

So we would need one or more strikes at the same time period that were large enough to cause major geologic instability, but not nuclear winter. One advantage that we have is that there is recent data on volcanic eruptions that might discuss cloud dissipation time etc. So, according to the Genesis, it would have to have ejected enough water vapor via volcanic activity to rain for 40 days, and would also have had to trigger sub-sea volcanic activity. May an index of meteor strikes within areas of active volcano chains could help narrow the field as well. So we would now have three constraints:Time, location, and magnitude. What would also be helpful would be an angle of impact, if that data were available. The angle would directly affect P-wave and S-wave propagation as well as force of impact. One of the hard parts of identifying the geological formations for proving a theory like this is the age of the event. 10k years or so of heat and pressure could be enough to complete erase the lower geological evidence. Surface events are easier to identify in some ways, despite the effects of erosion and human interference, but the best evidence would likely be found in the crustal sedimentary layers which should contain a carbon rich layer from the massive biological destruction such an event would cause.


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