Pre-Columbian Archaeology Research Papers - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

In 9067 BP (7117 BC, 8150 14C b.p.), a tsunami from the Gulf of Mexico flooded much of the Americas and Europe. In Ireland, it raced up the Irish Channel, destroyed the land bridge to Scotland and terminated the Early Mesolithic. In the... more

In 9067 BP (7117 BC, 8150 14C b.p.), a tsunami from the Gulf of Mexico flooded much of the Americas and Europe. In Ireland, it raced up the Irish Channel, destroyed the land bridge to Scotland and terminated the Early Mesolithic. In the Caribbean, sixty million died. The tsunami resulted from a turbidite off the continental shelf of Louisiana, which in turn was triggered by a strike in Alabama by a satellite of planet Nibiru. This was one of many catastrophes caused by Nibiru, which ended when Nibiru struck Jupiter, punched out its core to make Venus, and left the Great Red Spot.
Nibiru, a fiery sun-like planet, entered the Solar System about 25,000 years ago, a remnant from a supernova with ten times the mass of Earth. After encounters with other planets, it ended up with four moons, a cloud of satellites and a comet-like tail. It had a 20-year orbit opposite to that of Earth, but in the same plane, preceded by eight years with a Head, which had its own collection of satellites. Every 60 years Nibiru approached much closer, and every 1200 years initiated a major disaster. Previously, it had ended the Younger Dryas, sunk Atlantis, transferred Moon from Tiamat to Earth, and drowned the mammoths.
One of its many satellites struck Alabama and set southern forests afire. An earthquake from the shock liquified a layer of quartz in the continental shelf of Louisiana, which caused friction to drop to zero. Having lost all friction, an immense section of the continental shelf began to slide into the Gulf of Mexico, 4.2 km deep. As it fell, the turbidite gained speed and hurtled toward the Yucatan Peninsula. Behind it, oil, gas and naphtha erupted from the exposed shelf. Above it, the sea rose 1.9 km. Part way out, the turbidite regained friction and tore off a huge piece of shelf, which now lies against the Yucatan Peninsula. Raised high above the turbidite and filled with silt, the tsunami rushed away in all directions.
Going north, the tsunami faced a chasm 1.9 km below sea level, erupting with petroleum products. It crossed the chasm and spread out across the south and central plains, where it drowned all inhabitants, whose principal tribe was called Wa-gas. The wave crossed over the Great Lakes, which had not fully rebounded from the ice sheet. It careened around the western edge of the Laurentide Ice Sheet and eroded a 75 km strip of ice along the edge. Hemmed in by mountains on one side and the ice sheet on the other, it lost little height, and was still about 150 m high at the edge of Alaska. Just offshore, a floating wall of ice stopped it, 2 km thick, the Barents Ice Sheet, which had crossed the Arctic as a turbidite three thousand years earlier. It left a deposit of muck, absent of mammoths. Sea level rose 1.17 m from erosion of the ice sheet.
Going west, it knocked off the tops of three islands in the Gulf of Mexico, one of which appeared on a map made by an exploration party of 400 Magdalenians from the Rhine.
Going south, the tsunami obliterated the Mayan civilization of Mu around the Caribbean, 60 million people. Those living in the mountains, in the Valley of Mexico, and on the Pacific Coast survived. It crossed Panama to the Pacific. Narrow passages between low hills prevented flooding of the interior of Brazil and Venezuela.
Going east, the tsunami washed over Florida and crossed the Atlantic. At Ireland, it rushed up the Irish Sea, crashed against the land bridge to Scotland, pushed the bridge out to sea and terminated the Early Neolithic. It rushed up the English Channel from the south, and flooded Doggerland from the north. Denmark, the Netherlands, northern Germany, most of Belgium, northern France were drowned. Habitation in Iberia ceased.
The returning outwash filled the flood channel at Natchez, 26 km wide and 300 feet high. It continued straight into the Gulf of Mexico, created giant ripple marks on the seafloor, and left no delta. Where it ponded, silt settled out and left a distinctive soil. A sea of mud cut North America in half, which lay vacant for 500 years. Dust storms harassed the northern hemisphere. During that time, the Mississippi wandered back and forth over the floodplain.
On the west coast, surviving Wa-gas returned to Europe across the Pacific, to Chechnya. On the east coast, surviving Wa-gas returned to Europe across the Atlantic, to the Isle of Man, and the Sahara. Cheyenne returned from Mexico. Iberian sailors replanted trees in Ireland, whose forests had vanished.