This appears to be possible evidence for the impact theory starting the Younger Dryas. For those that don't know, during the last interglacial warming period around 14,500 years ago there was a sudden cold snap where instead of warming, the Northern latitudes drastically cooled for around 1000 years. Evidence we have of this period suggests that a large influx of freshwater changed the salinity levels of Northern ocean water to be less salty and thus less dense, causing the cold Northern water to not sink and thus not continue the cycle of convection for ocean circulation. The freshwater forcing on the ocean surface hampered the formation of North Atlantic Deep Water reducing the meridional heat transport, leading to cooling at high northern latitudes. This era of cooling is called the Younger Dryas period, and there is debate as to what exactly caused it. Which brings us back to the impact theory, as stated in the video, a large impact would have melted a vast portion of the ice caps allowing a huge influx of fresh water into the ocean. - I am a senior writing a thesis on the Younger Dryas period.
Except for the Ancient Aliens bits both Carlson and Hanckock repeat loudly results of studies conducted by actual scientist - so yes, they "are (repeating them) right". Part of the problem is that science takes time and scientist take their time before they confirm their hypothesis as being ridiculed for doing a sloppy and lousy research job is not a good thing for your future work prospects... Carlson and Hancock call that "government cover-up" of course.
That's what I was thinking. But if you think this is scary look up gamma ray bursts or GRB's. They move at the speed of light we would never see it coming until it hit us. A GRB has as much energy as our sun will produce in it's entire lifespan it's crazy.
Watch it again, there is background music. (To be honest i had to watch it again myself the music is barely noticeable because the video is so interesting)
Who says anything hit the planet. For example less than 20% of the roughly 13,500 craters on the moon, were actually caused by Meteorites. These sorts of programmes withhold more evidence than they reveal, simply due to inter-disciplinary competition. i.e one branch of science against another !!!!!
Frightening to think how recent and numerous these impacts are. There’s been so many close calls even recently that you have to think it’s only a matter of time.
Unlikely. This one is only 19 miles wide. The Chicxulub crater that wiped out the dinosaurs was 93 miles in diameter and was in the perfect location to create a catastrophic event.
Thing is carbon dating has a limitation to 50.000 years back because after that we can only guess when it happened. Because all of the famous sites are older than that. And we can not rely on the carbon data after 50.000 years because there would not be any carbon left to date. So That means we have to rely on translating the tablets accurate and educate people to translate rather than looking for carbon test, The Sumerians clay tablets are important, 20% is translated. What if the key to unlocking the tablets, lays in your head. That is why all need to care.
This would fit with the theory that large asteroids stuck the northern hemisphere's ice packs 12kya which triggered massive coastal flooding, altered global climate patterns, and brought an end to the last ice age.
I wonder if this asteroid impact had anything to do with the ice dam breaking in Mediterranean Sea, and causing the giant tsunami that lead to both the flooding of Atlantis, and the biblical stories of Noah's Flood...?
@@mark11967AD No. If Earth was destined for another icing over, that cycle has been at least _delayed_ due to human intervention through greenhouse gasses, and at most is not ready for that natural cycle to start yet _even if_ greenhouse gasses were not a factor. The time it takes the planet to cool off and initiate an ice age takes a long time, and global warming has slowed that down. If another ice age is to come, due to global warming it will come much more rapidly and forcefully (like water breaking through a dam, for example) than it ever has in the past due to that human intervention.
We are still in an ice age, one that began over 2.5 million years ago. We are just in one of it's many interglacial periods, meaning the climate is still cold by Earth standards, but not as cold as it can get. It is a common misconception that because we are not all throwing snowballs at each other all year round, the climate is warm. It really isn't.
And caused the Mediterranean Sea to break thru the Bosporus and flooding the then fresh water Black Sea resulting in inundation of the low lying coastal neolithic settlements - - thus the Biblical Legend of Noah's Flood was born! Everyone got that right ;-)
@@gm683 They have been championing this even when it was sidelined by academics. We have to give credit there. If it wasn't for them, the general public wouldn't know what to relate from this.
This totally proves there was an ancient civilization that cultivated the powers of the brain through ayahuasca and got extinct without leaving more than 2 pieces of alleged evidence Sarcasm off
This doesn't prove them right as the time range is difficult to determine. Both Graham Hancock and Randall Carlson are still lacking archaeological evidence to support their theories on top of this. Neither of these people are archaeologists and they do not understand the archaeological record. Please stop supporting pseudo archaeology and do your own research. "The researchers can't pinpoint the age of the crater. But its well-preserved condition suggests that it formed "after ice began to cover Greenland, so younger than three million years old and possibly as recently as 12,000 years ago," Kurt Kjaer, a professor at the Center for GeoGenetics at the Natural History Museum of Denmark in Copenhagen and the leader of the team, said in a written statement." - www.nbcnews.com/mach/science/huge-crater-discovered-hiding-under-greenland-ice-bigger-washington-d-ncna938221
@@jeffgarner1448 If Africa is to be believed as the "cradle" of life, having had humans in it for the longest period of time, why does it still have megafauna?
I love those guys, even if I take everything they say with a tremendous grain of salt. It's such a fun theory and I really want to believe it, this discovery certain seems to lend them some additional credibility.
Anyone think that this could help explain ‘the great flood’ found in ancient texts from around the globe? Or would the vaporized ice not have a significant effect to the sea level?
Experts also now believe the great sphinx is in fact the same age. I'm willing to bet humanity is a breakaway civilization from a more advanced civilization that was killed off during the last cataclysm
@@distorta really makes you wonder what languages they spoke and what clothes they wore, or games they played. How advanced was their math? Plato's writings suggest that Atlantis had sea trade.
I heard from the UN experts that all the ice would be gone and we'd be underwater by the year 2000. that only way to stop it is to give international cartels trillions of dollars.
If this really happened~12k years ago, perhaps the tsunami/floods it caused gave some base for the early Great Flood stories. On a different approach, perhaps Atlantis was destroyed because of this. Regardless of what myth we look at, this is fascinating.
@@laurabrooks8824 I'm not sure if edgar cayce said one of the sinkings was due to a meteor but the final sinking was from technology that sounds similar to haarp technology.
Atlantis is a fictional island mentioned within an allegory on the hubris of nations in Plato's works *Timaeus* and *Critias* , where it represents the antagonist naval power that besieges "Ancient Athens", the pseudo-historic embodiment of Plato's ideal state in The Republic.
S4sD4 I think it’s a change of an actual account, a corruption, of the Aryans (likely ‘people of the age of Aries’), survivors of a civilization prior to the deluge, who landed their ships and set up camp in the Caucasus; and from there they spread to Europe, the Indus Valley, West China, Anatolia, Mesopotamia, etc. (look up the Indo-European expansion). I know that parts of what I said might sound strange but as Tolkien put it: history becomes legend, and legend becomes myth. Our myths are glimpses into the distant, almost forgotten past. It’s like a game of telephone over the millenia!
After watching videos with Randall Carlson and Graham Hancock, how lucky are we to have found out that a crater has been found? It is even dated to around the time of the Younger Dryas. It's kind of cool to see evidence of this theory be discovered in real time.
What do you mean Hancock was right? I've followed him since I saw "Quest for the Lost Civilization" years ago, think he is 100% right about the enormous gaps in our history, but had he speculated or predicted that something like this impact crater would be found?
@@IlNeon86ll honestly the only theory he has that's respectable is his notion that civilization is older than current known history suggests. He consistently takes things too far in terms of conclusions he draws from speculative evidence
"An impact of this size is unlikely to happen again anytime soon." False statement. Nobody knows this and I wish people would stop glossing over this serious issue.
No, the Younger Dryas event was widespread and was caused by a carbonaceous meteorite. They are mistaken thinking this was only a few thousand years ago as the ice sheet covering it is over 100,000 years old. We are still coming out of the last Ice Age and if the record low temperatures already reached this Fall are a harbinger of things to come the cooling off of the Sun may send us into another Maunder Minimum. Also Greenland didn't have a summer this year and villages along the Canadian shores of the Arctic ocean were iced in over a month too early. All their supplies had to be flown in as the ships had to turn around.
@@jonathanstrauss2083 What does Greenland have to do with CA? Did CA not have all time record snow in the 2016/17 winter? I was born and raised in SOCA and no rain until winter is the norm there.
Dating it depends more on which department of Science is doing the dating. Rarely does the right branch of science get involved ! It's a bit like "first come first served", so we often get served up a total load of hypothetical nonsense, rather than precise science !!!.
@candiduscorvus Has been dated to Younger Dryas, ice cores only show ice dates after Younger Dryas. No ice cores show dates before Younger Dryas. Snow only deposited after the crater was made shows up in ice cores, hence crater dates to Younger Dryas event.
Bobby Cigarillo I'm curious as to the source that speculated that the impact might have been in this area. About 10 years ago I thought the speculation was focused on some where in northern Canada. True not that far away.
@@robertmelvin7908 Look at the globe they are not entirely too far apart in terms of incoming celestial objects. If the object that collided with earth was as large as they say(31 Kilometer wide crater), then its also entirely possible that it was part of an even larger meteor that might have broken apart and landed in Canada(Hudson Bay) and Greenland causing another ice age. Defintily check out Randall Carlson and Graham Hancocks findings on this
@@springbloom5940 says the fact that you find a crater that dates close to the time of when the younger dryas happened not to mention we're only speculating but from the sheer size and the possible age of this crater to go back further. I hate to say it but people today are infants when it comes to proof and how big of a threat something like this is when you listen to what Graham talks about how miniscule our own Cosmic defense budget is which is true is equal to the amount of an Apache attack helicopter which is pathetic these are things that are real look at what happened in Russia couple years ago look at the fact that we have Cosmic neighbors that we are just starting to see that slip from Interstellar space such as Ouimuamua the sheer speed alone from that object whatever it might have been if it would have been impacted the Earth as fast as it was going it could have done some major damage. That right there is what gram and Randall are been trying to tell people from they want though they have theories regarding how old Society really might have been the fact that ancient societies tens if not hundreds of thousands of years ago might have existed as advanced as we are maybe not in the same sort of Technology we see you today but close enough
@@springbloom5940 Even if it was 3 million years ago , it further proves Randall's point that we are subject to comets/asteroids impacting the Earth. It happens more than we think
Craters can be formed by other than a meteorite hitting the planet. For example less than 20% of the craters on the moon were formed by meteorite hits !
@@leeroberts4850 if it's that bad shouldn't we focus on trying to move to Mars or get sizeable amount of people on there and try to make a self-sustaining colony
@@leeroberts4850 My comment was sarcastic. That's how all those videos about global warming sound: super doom and gloom and immediate, directly followed by "But there's still hope!" Just read it like David Attenborough and that's what I was going for.
If, and it's a really big if. If the data concerning the age of ice layers turns out to be true this indeed could be the smoking gun. There are still other anamolies regarding certain structures that this does not appear to resolve. The Carolina Bays for one. The Younger Dryas was most likely caused by the flooding of the North Atlantic with massive amounts of cold fresh water disrupting the Ocean currents. But something had to have caused that water to be present. I have my doubts about Lake Aggaziz (sp) being a large enough volume to do the job. An impact could well have melted a much larger volume of ice it also could have caused massive numbers of icebergs to calve off the Greenland and Laurentide Ice Caps. These would further bring as much or more in terms of the volume of water into the ocean.
@@mpetersen6 It would be interesting to calculate the trajectory of this impact to compare with the impact in Michigan that appears to have caused the debris field recorded by the Carolina Bays. You're absolutely right that we ought not jump to conclusions, perhaps the ice was disrupted in a more ancient crater at that specific time because of the broader climate shifts of the YD. Whatever the caused the North Atlantic flooding, the reality of that global catastrophe isn't in question. Canadian impact, solar outburst, Atlantean HAARP project, ancient gold eating giant alien gods? Hard to say. What if it's not a smoking gun- it's a smoking machine gun that sprayed a burst asteroid across the northern latitudes? Wouldn't that be excitingly terrifying? Now to figure out what flash froze all the mammoths at those same latitudes in some other age. We sure have it good. For now! Hopefully this helps light a fire under the asteroid id & tracking budget.
@@mpetersen6 It is quite possible that this was one of many impacts that occurred in a short period of time. Explosions on entry are documented and if it came from a meteor shower there may have been several entering over a short period.
Thing is carbon dating has a limitation to 50.000 years back because after that we can only guess when it happened. Because all of the famous sites are older than that. And we can not rely on the carbon data after 50.000 years because there would not be any carbon left to date. So That means we have to rely on translating the tablets accurate and educate people to translate rather than looking for carbon test, The Sumerians clay tablets are important, 20% is translated. What if the key to unlocking the tablets, lays in your head. That is why all need to care.
No, even if the crater did date to the start of the Younger Dryas, it does not prove Hancock and Carlson's theories at all. We already know there was an abrupt climate change event at the start of the Younger Dryas 12,900 years ago, that is accepted widely by scientists, not controversial. We just don't know for sure what that happened. This may explain why that climate change event happened, that it was a meteorite impact. However, knowing the cause of the Younger Dryas event wouldn't prove Hancock and Carlson alternative archeological theories, it would not prove the existence of end of ice age civilizations ~12,900 year ago, not would it rewrite the dates of ancient civilizations - the age of the pyramids, the sphinx etc. Hancock and Carlson haven't proved their their ancient civilizations theories. It might settle the Clovis comet hypothesis, but that's it.
But the Geologist may NOT be the right type of Scientist to examine this geological feature. LESS than 20% of the roughly 13,500 craters on the moon are the result of Meteorite hits, and a "Space geologist" (Paleantologist) is NOT the right department of Science to ask about such a feature !!!!!
I think they've found another, much bigger crater under Antarctica ice sheet in 2017. I remember seeing something about it about four months ago. But this is a pretty interesting find for sure, thanks for sharing!
Technically it is still a candidate crater as in science the saying is extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence and we have not yet been able to acquire samples due to the potential crater being both old and buried quite deeply underneath the Antarctic Ice Sheets. (Drilling through them is very very hard and expensive) Here scientists lucked out in that the Glaciers provided the evidence needed for confirmation of the impact plus Erosion didn't have time to erase the central peak that allows us to differentiate craters from volcanic calderas.
also on the more recent episode with just Graham Hancock on, they discussed this at the beginning if I remember correctly... But I do love it when Randall Carlson is also a guest.
Why would an impact like this be unlikely to happen again soon? We go through the Taurid meteor stream twice a year every year. If the event of 1908, which was likely a meteor from the taurid meteor stream given the fact that it hit during the time we were going through it, had happened today over a large city it would mean thousands, if not millions, of people would be dead and billions of dollars in damages. I don’t see this as unlikely to happen again any time soon. There’s many large meteors in that stream that pose a threat to earth. The most disturbing thing about it is how little financial support we put toward defence from asteroids and meteors. We put more money into bombs a year than we do in space defence. Nobody with any authority to do anything significant about this is paying any attention to this very real threat
Don't you believe it. There are numerous methods to how craters are formed. Meteorites account for only a small % of all the known craters in our solar system ! So outrageous claims that this "crater" is the result of a meteorite impact are simply "jumping the gun". i.e false.
I also believe that a meteor or comet impacted the Philippines causing the old Taal and Laguna Volcano erupted. Its on the Eastern side of the Philippines that eventually ripped off the continental shelf and now forcing each other against.
@@digitalhippie2336 In a few hundred years all our own posessions and technology will have decayed to next to nothing, buildings eaten up by nature over hundreds of years, let alone thousands of years stacked with unimaginable floods
@@digitalhippie2336 beside sphinx and ALL the huge inexplicable perfectcut and transported hugestones ALL over the world? Remmember that for fóssil to form is necessary Very specific conditions.
Beautiful. Having spent many years of my life underground, surveying caves, I've developed a strong sense that, our Earth's secrets far surpass our knowledge of her.
@dichebach I’m jealous. How did you end up doing that? Work or hobby? What does one typically survey in cave systems? Sounds really cool, I’m seriously asking.
Dr. Zamora's discussions about this are fascinating as he measures the secondary impacts from this impact and their effects on the ice of that ice age.
I asked a flat Earther why the plasma dome didn't stop the asteroid, and he said that the plasma dome is peeled back whenever god is in the mood to stone a planet.
I have always found it comical that Greenland is mostly covered in ice and Iceland is mostly covered in green grass. Someone mixed up the names when creating the first maps! haha.
That was so interesting,these impacts this size or larger can be evolutionary game changers,it is very humbling to even think of experiencing such an impact...
This is one of the longer videos on your channel. These subjects deserve analysis and context, not the sound-byte treatment that caters to viewers with low attention spans.
It might have the reason for the fast end of the ice age and all that unexplainable stuff like the sea level rise and stuff. And the mass extinction then.
Impacts have a long lasting cooling effect after the innitial blast is over. It seems to have been big enough to affect the matters in the region at least, but by how much and for how long is yet to be discovered. Sea level rise always happen when an ice age is ending (we have records of more than one) same goes for extinctions - it is usually a combination of factors.
Get your facts straight...the crater in Greenland is not even close to the size of the crater in Canada. See Lac Manicouagan in Canada. Its close to 40 miles in diameter, twice the size of the Greenland crater.
@Mor MacFey well I guess I needed to be educated thanks for picking my interest about this. I had no idea that others were theorizing about this long time ago.........😁👍
Wow. Watching stuff like this is the best thing you can watch for a curious head. I dropped out of a PhD in order to start my own business years ago, but I wonder if I would have been happier in science?
This appears to be possible evidence for the impact theory starting the Younger Dryas. For those that don't know, during the last interglacial warming period around 14,500 years ago there was a sudden cold snap where instead of warming, the Northern latitudes drastically cooled for around 1000 years. Evidence we have of this period suggests that a large influx of freshwater changed the salinity levels of Northern ocean water to be less salty and thus less dense, causing the cold Northern water to not sink and thus not continue the cycle of convection for ocean circulation. The freshwater forcing on the ocean surface hampered the formation of North Atlantic Deep Water reducing the meridional heat transport, leading to cooling at high northern latitudes. This era of cooling is called the Younger Dryas period, and there is debate as to what exactly caused it. Which brings us back to the impact theory, as stated in the video, a large impact would have melted a vast portion of the ice caps allowing a huge influx of fresh water into the ocean.
- I am a senior writing a thesis on the Younger Dryas period.
joe rogan.
New evidence suggests that it is over fifty million years old.
Its actually 12800 yo
@@AJNoon lol
B+ 👋😎👌
So Graham Hancock and Randall Carlson were right all along.
im sure they are busy studying all this new info. wonder how this lines up with the carolina bays ?
yes but are there any frozen space aliens @@rigsby556
onlythewise1 ayyyyyy
whattttttt @@top_deckz
Except for the Ancient Aliens bits both Carlson and Hanckock repeat loudly results of studies conducted by actual scientist - so yes, they "are (repeating them) right". Part of the problem is that science takes time and scientist take their time before they confirm their hypothesis as being ridiculed for doing a sloppy and lousy research job is not a good thing for your future work prospects... Carlson and Hancock call that "government cover-up" of course.
A flatearther’s greatest fear is sphere itself
That is awesome! T-shirt material right there...
Brimannn tsk good one lol
Brilliant !
Great movie. Sphere.
brilliant!
I wonder how many such craters still hide underneath natural camouflage
Well there's the Gulf of Mexico, which if I remember correctly is the crater from the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs
Tenno Shenaniganizer the Chicxulub crater in Yucatan, not the gulf of Mexico
That's what I was thinking. But if you think this is scary look up gamma ray bursts or GRB's. They move at the speed of light we would never see it coming until it hit us.
A GRB has as much energy as our sun will produce in it's entire lifespan it's crazy.
@@Mantis_Toboggan_TrashMan Nobody said anything about scary, but yeah, you're right.
69
Thanks for not using background music.
Watch it again, there is background music. (To be honest i had to watch it again myself the music is barely noticeable because the video is so interesting)
lol
They did... It was just subtle.
The voice was hypnotic but It might have lost some charm if the speaker had to yell over the background. Bonus points for presentation!
You obviously are pretty stupid because there is background music. Anyway I don't understand why people complain so much about it.
"It could have hit from 10000 years ago to 3 million years ago."
Well, that narrows it down...
It also says it could have happened as recently as 12 thousand years ago.
Who says anything hit the planet. For example less than 20% of the roughly 13,500 craters on the moon, were actually caused by Meteorites. These sorts of programmes withhold more evidence than they reveal, simply due to inter-disciplinary competition. i.e one branch of science against another !!!!!
IT was the only way they could get this published...there is a strong lobby to discredit the YD impact theory.
bbbbut... that actually DOES narrow it down quite a bit.
😝
I've seen The Thing, I know where this is going.
Xune
See what happens...
yes its alive in the frozen ice
@@onlythewise1 ffs, Idk if this is a joke or not
yes its about the movie thing go watch it oh the first one @@J.ROD_CLASSIFIED
Xune hahah first thing I thought too, Morricone/ Carpenter synth notes ......
please keep that voice for your all videos
Yeah, keep the voice, get rid of the weird music.
Sounds like he's underwater - hard to understand
@@lake2788 I agree. His enunciation is bad.
Yes, nice voice man.
There is way too much bass, it's really hard to understand.
Frightening to think how recent and numerous these impacts are. There’s been so many close calls even recently that you have to think it’s only a matter of time.
Nope, it’s more the time of the matter...😱
well you can only dodge bullets for so long.
😦
I hope they narrow down the date of impact.
It was a Thursday.
@@ericmueller6836 it was before thursday's even existed
@@SecureLemons actually if you know the date of something you can calculate its week day with simple math
Unlikely. This one is only 19 miles wide. The Chicxulub crater that wiped out the dinosaurs was 93 miles in diameter and was in the perfect location to create a catastrophic event.
Thing is carbon dating has a limitation to 50.000 years back because after that we can only guess when it happened. Because all of the famous sites are older than that. And we can not rely on the carbon data after 50.000 years because there would not be any carbon left to date.
So That means we have to rely on translating the tablets accurate and educate people to translate rather than looking for carbon test, The Sumerians clay tablets are important, 20% is translated. What if the key to unlocking the tablets, lays in your head. That is why all need to care.
This would fit with the theory that large asteroids stuck the northern hemisphere's ice packs 12kya which triggered massive coastal flooding, altered global climate patterns, and brought an end to the last ice age.
I wonder if this asteroid impact had anything to do with the ice dam breaking in Mediterranean Sea, and causing the giant tsunami that lead to both the flooding of Atlantis, and the biblical stories of Noah's Flood...?
Eric Burkhart Very interesting. Could we be triggering another ice age now?
@@mark11967AD
No. If Earth was destined for another icing over, that cycle has been at least _delayed_ due to human intervention through greenhouse gasses, and at most is not ready for that natural cycle to start yet _even if_ greenhouse gasses were not a factor. The time it takes the planet to cool off and initiate an ice age takes a long time, and global warming has slowed that down. If another ice age is to come, due to global warming it will come much more rapidly and forcefully (like water breaking through a dam, for example) than it ever has in the past due to that human intervention.
We are still in an ice age, one that began over 2.5 million years ago. We are just in one of it's many interglacial periods, meaning the climate is still cold by Earth standards, but not as cold as it can get. It is a common misconception that because we are not all throwing snowballs at each other all year round, the climate is warm. It really isn't.
And caused the Mediterranean Sea to break thru the Bosporus and flooding the then fresh water Black Sea resulting in inundation of the low lying coastal neolithic settlements - - thus the Biblical Legend of Noah's Flood was born!
Everyone got that right ;-)
YOUNGER 👏 DRYAS 👏 GLOBAL 👏 CATACLYSM
Huh?
Scientist will tell you that no one knows what caused the Younger Dryas so this could well be what caused it.
Wiped out humanity
I'm down wiff dat bro
Randall and Graham are having a gooday
I believe so, This will vindicate the accuracy of Randall & Graham's cataclysmic theories.
The impact hypothesis is not their's.
@@gm683 They have been championing this even when it was sidelined by academics. We have to give credit there. If it wasn't for them, the general public wouldn't know what to relate from this.
Its been recently dated at over 50 million years old.
Randal Carlson / Graham Hancock anyone?
This totally proves there was an ancient civilization that cultivated the powers of the brain through ayahuasca and got extinct without leaving more than 2 pieces of alleged evidence
Sarcasm off
Don’t be ridiculous... oh wait
They still www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2004/11/041118104010.htm
New Evidence Puts Man In North America 50,000 Years Ago ...
Yep!
This doesn't prove them right as the time range is difficult to determine. Both Graham Hancock and Randall Carlson are still lacking archaeological evidence to support their theories on top of this. Neither of these people are archaeologists and they do not understand the archaeological record. Please stop supporting pseudo archaeology and do your own research.
"The researchers can't pinpoint the age of the crater. But its well-preserved condition suggests that it formed "after ice began to cover Greenland, so younger than three million years old and possibly as recently as 12,000 years ago," Kurt Kjaer, a professor at the Center for GeoGenetics at the Natural History Museum of Denmark in Copenhagen and the leader of the team, said in a written statement." - www.nbcnews.com/mach/science/huge-crater-discovered-hiding-under-greenland-ice-bigger-washington-d-ncna938221
Randal Carlson / Graham Hancock who what!
Learn, google them. Really nice podcasts with Joe Rogan
@@guillesanchez8816 amazing podcasts!
they said this 5yrs ago and look what's been found.
Graham Hancock, Randall Carlson.. nuff said
.
This is the smoking gun that will vindicate the accuracy of Graham's cataclysmic theories.
He was especially looking for an impact in North America that caused massive flooding there. But he did say it could have been a multiple impact.
stoneeh graham suggested it could have been more than one, also said their may have. been more than one major flood
@@stoneeh here, there every were, even on the moon🥴
and me...don't forget me..the answers not the questions.
There are two gentlemen out there sitting back saying, "told ya so".
GH
RC
Nope
@ either troll or speak but a repugnant one word answer(s) isn't all that engaging.
@@harpuaslutbag2997 repugnant
/rɪˈpʌɡnənt/
adjective
1.
extremely distasteful; unacceptable.
Nope
@ look up subjective while you got your nose in the dictionary.
Yup
@ ok.... extremely distasteful might be a bit overboard....I'll give ya that
It happened 12,800 years ago ,that’s just my guess
Credits to Graham Hancock.
Ok lol.
03:35:06 am.
@@Duffpunk brilliant man
I think 11,000 years ago but we both got similar answers
Maybe that event played a role in wiping out North American and European Megafauna.
Ma by the clovis people as well
yup, I'm dead now
Hi
@@jeffgarner1448 If Africa is to be believed as the "cradle" of life, having had humans in it for the longest period of time, why does it still have megafauna?
@@whatisthepointofthis1 youre right, people never hunt anything to extinction (sarcasm) even the african megafauna is endangered
Graham Hancock Randal Carlson will be interested in this find!
I love those guys, even if I take everything they say with a tremendous grain of salt. It's such a fun theory and I really want to believe it, this discovery certain seems to lend them some additional credibility.
AS soon as I read the date 12000 years ago I immediately thought of Hancock and Carlson!
I know it's very exciting
Someone shoot em both a text lol
they are dancing around right now
Anyone think that this could help explain ‘the great flood’ found in ancient texts from around the globe? Or would the vaporized ice not have a significant effect to the sea level?
That's exactly what caused this.
@@ryanjones7681 No, it is not.
No, not very plausible.
@@johanps4893 Yes it is.
Please clarify.
Wow this is exactly what Randall Carson was saying what killed the mega mammals about 11-12,000years ago
dcavic6157 the mind dialates thinking about the giant beavers......lol
Except for the fact that the last ones only became extinct 3500 years ago!
Experts also now believe the great sphinx is in fact the same age. I'm willing to bet humanity is a breakaway civilization from a more advanced civilization that was killed off during the last cataclysm
@@distorta
Geez, no one else has ever thought of that!!!...
Kidding 😁
Yes, many have...
@@distorta really makes you wonder what languages they spoke and what clothes they wore, or games they played. How advanced was their math? Plato's writings suggest that Atlantis had sea trade.
1:10 Wait, there were 2 of the same guy?
I guess that's what all scientists look like
They're clones made solely to work on this project xD
Brothers
@Konektuj Mene Hey there mister Freeman. It looks like you're running late.
@Konektuj Mene Can make all the dIFFerence in the world.
How good is NASA, not only pushing us forward but maybe helping uncovering one of our greatest secrets of our past. So much respect!
Give it another decade or so, and that pesky ice will no longer hide the crater.
Yeah, but it will be a lake.
Damn pesky ice.
You mean 500 years.
I heard from the UN experts that all the ice would be gone and we'd be underwater by the year 2000. that only way to stop it is to give international cartels trillions of dollars.
@@retiredshitposter1062 How will buying oil stop it?
If this really happened~12k years ago, perhaps the tsunami/floods it caused gave some base for the early Great Flood stories.
On a different approach, perhaps Atlantis was destroyed because of this.
Regardless of what myth we look at, this is fascinating.
Atlantis destroyed by their own technology. Look up edgar cayce. 3 destructions of Atlantis.
The people that live in the Yucatan think that meteor sunk Atlantis. Just saying
@@laurabrooks8824 I'm not sure if edgar cayce said one of the sinkings was due to a meteor but the final sinking was from technology that sounds similar to haarp technology.
Atlantis is a fictional island mentioned within an allegory on the hubris of nations in Plato's works *Timaeus* and *Critias* , where it represents the antagonist naval power that besieges "Ancient Athens", the pseudo-historic embodiment of Plato's ideal state in The Republic.
@@poorsimplemike maybe it's not fictional. Time will tell
After that meteor melted the ice cap and blew all that into the atmosphere, it probably rained for 40 days.
Noah’s Ark
And the water Came From Below and above.
S4sD4 I think it’s a change of an actual account, a corruption, of the Aryans (likely ‘people of the age of Aries’), survivors of a civilization prior to the deluge, who landed their ships and set up camp in the Caucasus; and from there they spread to Europe, the Indus Valley, West China, Anatolia, Mesopotamia, etc. (look up the Indo-European expansion). I know that parts of what I said might sound strange but as Tolkien put it: history becomes legend, and legend becomes myth. Our myths are glimpses into the distant, almost forgotten past. It’s like a game of telephone over the millenia!
Hahahaha yeah..keep smoking that pipe
😒
After watching videos with Randall Carlson and Graham Hancock, how lucky are we to have found out that a crater has been found? It is even dated to around the time of the Younger Dryas. It's kind of cool to see evidence of this theory be discovered in real time.
No, it is dated to ~ 58 million years ago.
@@plasmaphysics1017 Link to study please?
@@alexanderren1097 Younger Dryas contender for sure.
Graham Hancock was right!!!
''Great Scott,'' I believe so, This should vindicate Randall & Graham's cataclysmic theories.
Randall Carlson was right, you mean
Eh... Nope!
@@samthfkr your mom
What do you mean Hancock was right? I've followed him since I saw "Quest for the Lost Civilization" years ago, think he is 100% right about the enormous gaps in our history, but had he speculated or predicted that something like this impact crater would be found?
Graham Hancock, “Impact crater in Greenland? Hold my beer”
My joint you mean
who is graham hancock.
@@studioelvis8624 If you haven't already, look into Graham Hancock and Randall Carlson.
@@Chimp_Handzee thank you ..
@@Chimp_Handzee, or you could study actual Science.
Graham Hancock is doin some smug dancing somewhere.
Came here for the comments mentioning Graham Footpenis
My thoughts exactly!
Yea he sure was right about the Mayans and the world ending on Dec 21, 2012....
Not really, no.
@@IlNeon86ll honestly the only theory he has that's respectable is his notion that civilization is older than current known history suggests. He consistently takes things too far in terms of conclusions he draws from speculative evidence
This could be the origin of all the flood myths around the world, interesting.
no of some maybe , google f.e. burkal crater or beste watch 100 hours of randal carlson
If that’s true, civilization is atleast 10000 years old.
Flood myths?
First thought in my head
Leperd Dion course its older than that
"An impact of this size is unlikely to happen again anytime soon." False statement. Nobody knows this and I wish people would stop glossing over this serious issue.
Sky is falling. Better lay awake at night and worry about it.
I wonder if this was what was responsible for the Younger Dryas event.
That is the thinking
No, the Younger Dryas event was widespread and was caused by a carbonaceous meteorite. They are mistaken thinking this was only a few thousand years ago as the ice sheet covering it is over 100,000 years old. We are still coming out of the last Ice Age and if the record low temperatures already reached this Fall are a harbinger of things to come the cooling off of the Sun may send us into another Maunder Minimum. Also Greenland didn't have a summer this year and villages along the Canadian shores of the Arctic ocean were iced in over a month too early. All their supplies had to be flown in as the ships had to turn around.
@@MountainFisher Greenland stealing all our snow and precipitation from the western states of the United States then
@@jonathanstrauss2083 What does Greenland have to do with CA? Did CA not have all time record snow in the 2016/17 winter? I was born and raised in SOCA and no rain until winter is the norm there.
I don’t know why but even after he said “A remote part of Greenland” I was blown away by how remote that crater is
Dating that crater accurately is going to be crucial to many other sciences going forward.
I can't even date girls
@@VisboerAnton rofl
Dating it depends more on which department of Science is doing the dating. Rarely does the right branch of science get involved ! It's a bit like "first come first served", so we often get served up a total load of hypothetical nonsense, rather than precise science !!!.
@candiduscorvus Has been dated to Younger Dryas, ice cores only show ice dates after Younger Dryas.
No ice cores show dates before Younger Dryas. Snow only deposited after the crater was made shows up in ice cores, hence crater dates to Younger Dryas event.
@@VisboerAnton neither can I, as I'm married.
So cool. Caught my interest immediately.
Impact goeswith ejection, It's electric.
What do you expect from nasa?
Very interesting considering the younger dryas impact is speculated to have occurred in this area.
Bobby Cigarillo I'm curious as to the source that speculated that the impact might have been in this area. About 10 years ago I thought the speculation was focused on some where in northern Canada. True not that far away.
@@robertmelvin7908 Look at the globe they are not entirely too far apart in terms of incoming celestial objects. If the object that collided with earth was as large as they say(31 Kilometer wide crater), then its also entirely possible that it was part of an even larger meteor that might have broken apart and landed in Canada(Hudson Bay) and Greenland causing another ice age. Defintily check out Randall Carlson and Graham Hancocks findings on this
@@bobbycigarillo it was only 1 km wide. the crater it left is 31 km*
@@andrewgonzalo8369 As I said, 31 km wide crater
@dgtrh gabhfd Or before..
Graham Hancock and Randall Carlson have entered the chat.
WHO?
Darwin scooted out, with tail between his legs.
Soooo.... this one could have grilled the Clovis culture ?
And all N. American mega fauna right along with it.
It is possible but, we need more data
At that latitude would it have done some Siberian woolly mammoths as well?
wondered the same thing.
They would've witnessed it.
0:38 "for thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of years"
Doco about a 12,000 - 13,000 year old meteorite strike...
Now could you guys check if there's one under Iceland's green?
lol
@Betty r/woooooosh
Cineva nah, she got it, you just couldn’t tell
R/wooosh
@@andreipop5805 mayb u wooshed urself there.
MrFlippy lol
It's the meteor from Ice Age 5: Collision Course
Watch the tier zoo channel
The *greatest* movie of our generation
Randall Carlson got it right...
Deprogrammed Woke-ye West
Says who?
@@springbloom5940 says the fact that you find a crater that dates close to the time of when the younger dryas happened not to mention we're only speculating but from the sheer size and the possible age of this crater to go back further. I hate to say it but people today are infants when it comes to proof and how big of a threat something like this is when you listen to what Graham talks about how miniscule our own Cosmic defense budget is which is true is equal to the amount of an Apache attack helicopter which is pathetic these are things that are real look at what happened in Russia couple years ago look at the fact that we have Cosmic neighbors that we are just starting to see that slip from Interstellar space such as Ouimuamua the sheer speed alone from that object whatever it might have been if it would have been impacted the Earth as fast as it was going it could have done some major damage.
That right there is what gram and Randall are been trying to tell people from they want though they have theories regarding how old Society really might have been the fact that ancient societies tens if not hundreds of thousands of years ago might have existed as advanced as we are maybe not in the same sort of Technology we see you today but close enough
pyro lopez
Thanks for making my point for me - you willfully excluded the other *3 million years* that this may have happened in.
@@springbloom5940 Even if it was 3 million years ago , it further proves Randall's point that we are subject to comets/asteroids impacting the Earth. It happens more than we think
@Psilocybe Cubensis Bear Love your name. If I remember correctly, Carlson said there have been 9 mass extinctions in the last 200,000 years.
a stream of rocks hit us between Michigan Saginaw Bay & N. Greenland 12,900 years ago
1:34 - Circular Depression, I think we can all relate to that am I right?...no?...okay
Thanks for starting my day with a laugh
@@fhansen oh enlighten me wise ones?! English is not my first language.
Craters can be formed by other than a meteorite hitting the planet. For example less than 20% of the craters on the moon were formed by meteorite hits !
So thats where they get the stand arrows from
They don't think it be like it is but it do!
Maybe you had too much Jojo
@@arent2295 I need more jojo
this comment will blow up way more once this gets revealed in the anime
I really wish they had gone on to tell us how much this sudden melting of ice could have raised the height of the oceans.
First Greenland video with no mentioning of human made global warming I've seen since like, forever.
Yeah it was nice.
But did you know that as this rate, we'll be dead in 5 minutes? However, there is still time to make a change.
I Know !
What a Welcome "Change" ! 😎
@@leeroberts4850 if it's that bad shouldn't we focus on trying to move to Mars or get sizeable amount of people on there and try to make a self-sustaining colony
@@leeroberts4850 My comment was sarcastic. That's how all those videos about global warming sound: super doom and gloom and immediate, directly followed by "But there's still hope!" Just read it like David Attenborough and that's what I was going for.
if that happened 12800 years ago, the comet research group are right and graham hancock may have a point.
If, and it's a really big if. If the data concerning the age of ice layers turns out to be true this indeed could be the smoking gun. There are still other anamolies regarding certain structures that this does not appear to resolve. The Carolina Bays for one. The Younger Dryas was most likely caused by the flooding of the North Atlantic with massive amounts of cold fresh water disrupting the Ocean currents. But something had to have caused that water to be present. I have my doubts about Lake Aggaziz (sp) being a large enough volume to do the job. An impact could well have melted a much larger volume of ice it also could have caused massive numbers of icebergs to calve off the Greenland and Laurentide Ice Caps. These would further bring as much or more in terms of the volume of water into the ocean.
@@mpetersen6 It would be interesting to calculate the trajectory of this impact to compare with the impact in Michigan that appears to have caused the debris field recorded by the Carolina Bays. You're absolutely right that we ought not jump to conclusions, perhaps the ice was disrupted in a more ancient crater at that specific time because of the broader climate shifts of the YD. Whatever the caused the North Atlantic flooding, the reality of that global catastrophe isn't in question. Canadian impact, solar outburst, Atlantean HAARP project, ancient gold eating giant alien gods? Hard to say. What if it's not a smoking gun- it's a smoking machine gun that sprayed a burst asteroid across the northern latitudes? Wouldn't that be excitingly terrifying? Now to figure out what flash froze all the mammoths at those same latitudes in some other age. We sure have it good. For now! Hopefully this helps light a fire under the asteroid id & tracking budget.
@@mpetersen6 It is quite possible that this was one of many impacts that occurred in a short period of time. Explosions on entry are documented and if it came from a meteor shower there may have been several entering over a short period.
Thing is carbon dating has a limitation to 50.000 years back because after that we can only guess when it happened. Because all of the famous sites are older than that. And we can not rely on the carbon data after 50.000 years because there would not be any carbon left to date.
So That means we have to rely on translating the tablets accurate and educate people to translate rather than looking for carbon test, The Sumerians clay tablets are important, 20% is translated. What if the key to unlocking the tablets, lays in your head. That is why all need to care.
No, even if the crater did date to the start of the Younger Dryas, it does not prove Hancock and Carlson's theories at all. We already know there was an abrupt climate change event at the start of the Younger Dryas 12,900 years ago, that is accepted widely by scientists, not controversial. We just don't know for sure what that happened. This may explain why that climate change event happened, that it was a meteorite impact. However, knowing the cause of the Younger Dryas event wouldn't prove Hancock and Carlson alternative archeological theories, it would not prove the existence of end of ice age civilizations ~12,900 year ago, not would it rewrite the dates of ancient civilizations - the age of the pyramids, the sphinx etc.
Hancock and Carlson haven't proved their their ancient civilizations theories. It might settle the Clovis comet hypothesis, but that's it.
ASMR: geologist painstakingly recounts discovery of an impact crater
But the Geologist may NOT be the right type of Scientist to examine this geological feature. LESS than 20% of the roughly 13,500 craters on the moon are the result of Meteorite hits, and a "Space geologist" (Paleantologist) is NOT the right department of Science to ask about such a feature !!!!!
I think they've found another, much bigger crater under Antarctica ice sheet in 2017. I remember seeing something about it about four months ago. But this is a pretty interesting find for sure, thanks for sharing!
Technically it is still a candidate crater as in science the saying is extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence and we have not yet been able to acquire samples due to the potential crater being both old and buried quite deeply underneath the Antarctic Ice Sheets. (Drilling through them is very very hard and expensive)
Here scientists lucked out in that the Glaciers provided the evidence needed for confirmation of the impact plus Erosion didn't have time to erase the central peak that allows us to differentiate craters from volcanic calderas.
It could be the meteor that killed off the Ancients that all the theorists talk about.
Isn't there also a magnetic difference in Greenland? I sort of recall hearing this, not sure if it could be connected to one another
I find this stuff so interesting
Harry Burridge samw i wasn’t big in science or anything related to it but now all of a sudden I am.
i think you would like 'worlds in collision ' by immanuelle velokovsky
Harry Burridge you should study in this field bro I’m interested in medicine so imma be a doctor
Scrolling through the comments looking for that one 12 year old to say "dusty divot".
Didn't take long..
...........
Deeper Divot
Lol they made a crater trying to copy fortnite
Hey look its *DUSTY DIVOT*
You’re the only person commentin I️t actually
Nah I'm 11
0:48 "...it all started with a joint, and Joe Rogan's Podcast featuring Randall Carlson and Graham Hancock."
also on the more recent episode with just Graham Hancock on, they discussed this at the beginning if I remember correctly... But I do love it when Randall Carlson is also a guest.
Samee 💀
Earth is such a mysteriously amazing place. So much left to discover. The average lifetime of a human seems so insignificant.
This could explain how Bjork got here.
Why would an impact like this be unlikely to happen again soon? We go through the Taurid meteor stream twice a year every year. If the event of 1908, which was likely a meteor from the taurid meteor stream given the fact that it hit during the time we were going through it, had happened today over a large city it would mean thousands, if not millions, of people would be dead and billions of dollars in damages. I don’t see this as unlikely to happen again any time soon. There’s many large meteors in that stream that pose a threat to earth. The most disturbing thing about it is how little financial support we put toward defence from asteroids and meteors. We put more money into bombs a year than we do in space defence. Nobody with any authority to do anything significant about this is paying any attention to this very real threat
Don’t worry we have the SPACE FORCE
**laughs in chelyabinsk**
Unlikely statistically speaking. An impact of this magnitude only happens every million years or so.
We don't know if was impact or electric-arc cratering yet.
Some Dude lol fair, I forgot about space force
this is the least political video i've seen all year
alelujah to that
Don't you believe it. There are numerous methods to how craters are formed. Meteorites account for only a small % of all the known craters in our solar system ! So outrageous claims that this "crater" is the result of a meteorite impact are simply "jumping the gun". i.e false.
I read the title and thought it was another RTgames cities skylines video
I saw the thumbnail and thought "Gross, a mouldy cake experiment".
The video exceeded expectations 😀
I also believe that a meteor or comet impacted the Philippines causing the old Taal and Laguna Volcano erupted. Its on the Eastern side of the Philippines that eventually ripped off the continental shelf and now forcing each other against.
I've actually been expecting such an announcement from the Arctic or Antarctic as the ice melts.
I'd like to see the same lidar data over Antarctica
As it melts? Hoho.
FINALLY OTHER THAN BRIGHT INSIGHT, NASA IS TALKING ABOUT IT!
RIP another human ancient civilization, and their history and their technology.
Imagine that Happening to us today? Would que bem able to regroup or be sent to the rock ages again?
Why nobody dug up their "technologys" yet ?
@@digitalhippie2336 In a few hundred years all our own posessions and technology will have decayed to next to nothing, buildings eaten up by nature over hundreds of years, let alone thousands of years stacked with unimaginable floods
@@rbruce5270 makes sense, but still, there had to be at least any kind of evidence besides pyramids or else
@@digitalhippie2336 beside sphinx and ALL the huge inexplicable perfectcut and transported hugestones ALL over the world? Remmember that for fóssil to form is necessary Very specific conditions.
If this happened during the end of the last ice age, wouldn't that make it contemporaneous with the Barringer crater in Arizona?
Barringer Crater was created around 50,000 years ago.
The algorithm recommending videos like this is much like that meteorite that made the crater, infrequent but not so rare.
Looking forward to when they finally get more evidence about its age.
Do you believe everything you are told?
I SMELL A SURPRISE BIRTHDAY PARTY
@@beestoe993 CLIMATE SHEEPLE BELIEVE ANYTHING
Don’t let that distract you from the fact that they did surgery on a grape
A robot did the surgery.
The smoking gun for the Younger Dryas Extinction Event? I hope they follow up on this discovery!
I'm telling you guys, there are Predators hunting xenomorphs in an ancient pyramid under the ice!
Beautiful. Having spent many years of my life underground, surveying caves, I've developed a strong sense that, our Earth's secrets far surpass our knowledge of her.
Most people are able to work that out pretty quick... why did you have to live underground to develop a sense that most people just have? Are you ok?
@@Tezwah mans been living under a rock
@dichebach
I’m jealous. How did you end up doing that? Work or hobby? What does one typically survey in cave systems? Sounds really cool, I’m seriously asking.
They should drill in the ice to get direct samples from the surface of the crater.
Oh yeah, lets go ahead and do that. You can borrow them an ice pick and a shovel, only 300 meters
@@twoscoopsfromhell2705 < They have drilled deeper than that in Antarctica.
How far away is there visible shocking of quarts stone found?
Or is it only from the crater?
We are constantly getting proof that we do in fact live in the JoJo universe
I though the same thing
Dr. Zamora's discussions about this are fascinating as he measures the secondary impacts from this impact and their effects on the ice of that ice age.
How this guy manages to make a meteor impact sound like a bedtime story is beyond me. Catch me falling asleep to this for the next week and a half
Perfect watch right before bedtime.
I asked a flat Earther why the plasma dome didn't stop the asteroid, and he said that the plasma dome is peeled back whenever god is in the mood to stone a planet.
😂😂😂😂😂😂
I have always found it comical that Greenland is mostly covered in ice and Iceland is mostly covered in green grass. Someone mixed up the names when creating the first maps! haha.
I think when they made up the names the descriptions were accurate until the comet struck and changed everything.
It was actually on purpose, didn’t they teach you that in school?
@@pablovi77 I was taught that in elementary school, but that was before common core.
Vikings named them intentionally to throw off anyone who might want to colonize centuries ago. { If this is Greenland. Iceland must be hell! }
they did that on purpose .. you never heard that story of the vikings miss matching on purpose to hide it from enemies
Graham Hancock *drops mic*
Randall Carlson *adds to slide no#10,528*
“Jamie, pull up slide no#10,528”
😂😂😂
When you're playing Minecraft and you've spawned in a very large tundra biome...
The best motivation for the Manned Interstellar Initiatives. Before extinction.
Even manned interplanetary expansion would greatly improve our odds, haha.
I’m curious: this is a great short, factual video on this subject; WHY did almost 600 people give it a thumbs down?
That was so interesting,these impacts this size or larger can be evolutionary game changers,it is very humbling to even think of experiencing such an impact...
Go Flames Go!
This is one of the longer videos on your channel. These subjects deserve analysis and context, not the sound-byte treatment that caters to viewers with low attention spans.
there's more info in the description for those who want more detail.
Sounds like you have work to do then.
you're right, they need to be much longer for those of us not easily distrac....oh look a bird!
I like how everyone looking into these subjects is now mentioning Randal and Gram, can’t wait till it’s worthy of international national news
It might have the reason for the fast end of the ice age and all that unexplainable stuff like the sea level rise and stuff. And the mass extinction then.
Impacts have a long lasting cooling effect after the innitial blast is over. It seems to have been big enough to affect the matters in the region at least, but by how much and for how long is yet to be discovered. Sea level rise always happen when an ice age is ending (we have records of more than one) same goes for extinctions - it is usually a combination of factors.
just wait until we can fully map the ocean floor. I can’t even guess how many craters the water hides
Get your facts straight...the crater in Greenland is not even close to the size of the crater in Canada. See Lac Manicouagan in Canada. Its close to 40 miles in diameter, twice the size of the Greenland crater.
Why, why..... would anyone give a thumbs down.... this is an informative wonderful video......
👍👍👍👍👍
Flerfers wanting to make out it's "fake" and "NASA conspiraseh"?
@Mor MacFey well I guess I needed to be educated thanks for picking my interest about this. I had no idea that others were theorizing about this long time ago.........😁👍
I bet Rogen brings it up on one of his shows soon.
I came here for this comment
Narrator...nice voice...enjoyed listening to a fascinating topic.
“Not likely to happen again anytime soon” scratching my head wondering how he could possibly know that! Wishful thinking? 🤔
we had a local slide event that a geologist declared that it should not have happened for another 1500 years
video should be titled... "How Atlantis Met it's Doom"
Wow. Watching stuff like this is the best thing you can watch for a curious head. I dropped out of a PhD in order to start my own business years ago, but I wonder if I would have been happier in science?
When ever we fly are moon an i see all the indentation on the moon I think thank you moon for saving us frum a meteor strike..
Which are still being observed as happening today.
The importance of a fertile space program 😁👍 Godspeed Congraatulatiions on the discovery
From: LarryWhittington
EXCELLENT narration!! Very refreshing after so many computer-generated LA accents!
One of the youngest large craters on earth?
Weezy “Young crater baybayyy*