|
Post by 1dave on Feb 28, 2023 5:02:23 GMT -5
You would think SCIENTISTS would be unusually curious, observant, quick to notice something unusual. Such is not the case. This planet always has, and always will, be peppered by objects large and small from outer space, but for thousands of years their impact craters have been misidentified as volcanic. The huge impacts send continents scurrying. This was noticed by ONE person who was derided for hundreds of years before the truth dawned on the rest of us. Something HUGE happened to end Jurassic Time. The signs of what happened are blatantly obvious but they can't see them.
|
|
geoff59
spending too much on rocks
Member since October 2022
Posts: 290
|
Post by geoff59 on Feb 28, 2023 11:03:52 GMT -5
What do you think when they find complete dinosaur fossils? I think it’s unlikely that in a general sense, a dead reptile/animal would go unscavenged by others. On land or in the water. What sort of event would it take to bury them in sediment quickly (to prevent something from scavenging them?) So I’ve often wondered about some of the fossils they unearth, the more or less complete ones, and I wonder how many of them may have died on the same day or week. During a doomsday event in other words. That would explain why the dead creature wasn’t eaten by others, and other circumstances.
If you spend time out in the wilderness, you don’t find dead, complete animals too often. Nobody does.
I also wonder the same about some of the plant and insect fossils. How does a complete insect end up fossilized in amber? Why didn’t it escape such a fate? Especially one that can fly away. It suggests a lot of sudden, intense heat to me. A catastrophic event of some sort. I’ve walked a lot of forest trails, and I tend to observe the world around me pretty closely. I can’t recall ever seeing many dead insects just sitting on a limb or tree trunk. Or on the ground. Again, I think for the most part they would be scavenged, by ants likely. I’ve spent 100s of hours out there photographing insects up close, looking around especially for them.
I have no proof to offer of course, it’s just something that I think fits right in to the point you covered. Scientists are usually/normally frustratingly science-conservative and close-minded in their thinking, on that I can’t agree with you more.
|
|
|
Post by 1dave on Feb 28, 2023 12:01:48 GMT -5
What do you think when they find complete dinosaur fossils? I think it’s unlikely that in a general sense, a dead reptile/animal would go unscavenged by others. On land or in the water. What sort of event would it take to bury them in sediment quickly (to prevent something from scavenging them?) So I’ve often wondered about some of the fossils they unearth, the more or less complete ones, and I wonder how many of them may have died on the same day or week. During a doomsday event in other words. That would explain why the dead creature wasn’t eaten by others, and other circumstances. If you spend time out in the wilderness, you don’t find dead, complete animals too often. Nobody does. I also wonder the same about some of the plant and insect fossils. How does a complete insect end up fossilized in amber? Why didn’t it escape such a fate? Especially one that can fly away. It suggests a lot of sudden, intense heat to me. A catastrophic event of some sort. I’ve walked a lot of forest trails, and I tend to observe the world around me pretty closely. I can’t recall ever seeing many dead insects just sitting on a limb or tree trunk. Or on the ground. Again, I think for the most part they would be scavenged, by ants likely. I’ve spent 100s of hours out there photographing insects up close, looking around especially for them. I have no proof to offer of course, it’s just something that I think fits right in to the point you covered. Scientists are usually/normally frustratingly science-conservative and close-minded in their thinking, on that I can’t agree with you more. Yes, especially today - POLITICS AND MONEY!Get out of step with "modern thought" and you will be shredded from head to toenail. Why dare it? Also it is hard to see what you don't believe in. "What? MY CHILD? Impossible! Several hundred years ago the "Scientific Universe" was ripped asunder by opposing belief systems. The Catastrophists VS the the Steady Stateists. The " what's happening now is the way it has always been" group won and has been in control ever since. Reality is that the universe around us has NEVER been this way before, and will never be this way again PERIOD.
|
|
|
Post by Son Of Beach on Feb 28, 2023 12:23:25 GMT -5
You would think SCIENTISTS would be unusually curious, observant, quick to notice something unusual. Such is not the case. This planet always has, and always will, be peppered by objects large and small from outer space, but for thousands of years their impact craters have been misidentified as volcanic. The huge impacts send continents scurrying. This was noticed by ONE person who was derided for hundreds of years before the truth dawned on the rest of us. Something HUGE happened to end Jurassic Time. The signs of what happened are blatantly obvious but they can't see them. Whereabouts Dave?
|
|
|
Post by 1dave on Feb 28, 2023 13:37:56 GMT -5
My new book, "The strange Story of Silver Reef" answers question WHERE DID THE SILVER COME FROM? On 13 Dec 1875 (published in the Salt Lake Tribune -page 4 on the 19th) about one month ago I discovered the Tecumseh mine situated on a hill by the same name. The vein is small but rich and easily worked. On the northeast end of Tecumseh Hill is Silver Flat, chuck full of little chloride veins. Still further east we have Silver Reef and Silver Butte Hills, also full of chlorides by the acre, and can dig up the ore as easily as the farmer digs his potatoes. The veins run with the stratification of the sandstone, and are very regular as the formation is not broken up. There are from three to four layers or strata of ore in the hills and my impression is that at a certain depth these veins will all come together in a fissure in the primitive formation that underlies this sandstone cap. The formation east of the red sandstone belt is evidently sedimentary, and I am of the opinion that this great basin has been THE BED OF A GREAT INLAND OCEAN, And at some time there was a great upheaval from volcanic disturbances which threw these sandstone reefs in their present shape; and in this upheaval, fissures were formed connecting with the ore sources in the depths of the earth, the sandstone and wood being porous, received and retained the gaseous emanations escaping through these fissures ~ thence the anomaly of rich silver ore in sandstone and petrified wood. The line of upheaval is about three miles east of the Pride of the West Reef (an account of which I gave your readers last August). Miners, geologists, scientists, all have this mistaken notion that valuable elements come up from the center of the earth through volcanic action. That is wrong! Occasionally a volcanic vein will penetrate an impact layer containing valuable minerals and carry them to the surface, but much of what they have interpreted as volcanic is actually SHOCK WAVE GENERATED SILICA JELL!
Where DID the silver in 250 million year old Chinle Petrified Wood come from? The most obvious (if you think about it. aw, why bother.) it originated on earth with the Alamo Impact 385 million years ago in Nevada.
|
|