You can login if you already have an account or register by clicking the button below.
Registering is free and all you need is a username and password. We never ask you for your e-mail.
[–]LordHuggington0 points
14 points
14 points
(+14|-0)
ago
(edited ago)
Roughly 13 kYa, average global temperatures suddenly spiked by 15°C. Sea levels rose by 400 feet. 75% of megafauna (animals > 100 lbs) went extinct. The ice cap occupying the northern half of North America disappeared.
We haven't the slightest clue about what existed prior to this event as most of it would be underwater. Sites like this are the future of archeology and anthropology, if their study isn't (((suppressed))) by career academics.
[+]plagueship3 points4 points7 points
ago
(edited ago)
[–]plagueship3 points
4 points
7 points
(+7|-3)
ago
(edited ago)
We've been here before, there are no structures, it just the way the data looks when different survey ships scan at different times.
everything isn't exactly calibrated or even uses the same equipment, they have different resolutions and error margins.
The result is lines underwater that aren't actually there.
Yeah, there is swamp land by me that has straight lines in it, i have looked at old maps of the area as early as the 1800s and the lines are still there,
Sort: Top
[–] LordHuggington 0 points 14 points 14 points (+14|-0) ago (edited ago)
Roughly 13 kYa, average global temperatures suddenly spiked by 15°C. Sea levels rose by 400 feet. 75% of megafauna (animals > 100 lbs) went extinct. The ice cap occupying the northern half of North America disappeared.
We haven't the slightest clue about what existed prior to this event as most of it would be underwater. Sites like this are the future of archeology and anthropology, if their study isn't (((suppressed))) by career academics.
[–] ClownBozo [S] 1 point 7 points 8 points (+8|-1) ago
[–] XAPHAN 0 points 5 points 5 points (+5|-0) ago
The answer is obvious.
[–] plagueship 3 points 4 points 7 points (+7|-3) ago (edited ago)
We've been here before, there are no structures, it just the way the data looks when different survey ships scan at different times. everything isn't exactly calibrated or even uses the same equipment, they have different resolutions and error margins. The result is lines underwater that aren't actually there.
Article here
[–] ZenAtheist 1 point 5 points 6 points (+6|-1) ago
Thanks. Government Disinformation Man! Now I am pacified.
[–] Cat-hax ago
Yeah, there is swamp land by me that has straight lines in it, i have looked at old maps of the area as early as the 1800s and the lines are still there,
[–] ClownBozo [S] 0 points 3 points 3 points (+3|-0) ago
[–] voats4goats 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
Neat. Feeds into my theory that the great flood story stems from the sea levels rising breached the straight of Gibraltar
[–] Radippo ago
That's the Labyrinth of Knossos.
[–] Melissus ago
Its old news.Look at this.