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Message Subject 286 Million Year Old Block Wall Found In Oklahoma Coal Mine!
Poster Handle superdave
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Love it that you can't post without cursing... shows your IQ... however please read this link, Goober!

[link to www.allaboutarchaeology.org]

QUOTE: "So, is carbon dating accurate? It is for specimens which only date back a few thousand years. Anything beyond that is problematic and highly doubtful." UNQUOTE

Do some research before posting your ignorance, will ya?
 Quoting: doomtardis 1336808


I gave one example. Here's some others:

Word of Mouth
Existing Lore
Regional Myths

Modern humans, Homo sapiens sapiens, appeared about 130,000 years ago. The area between the Tigris and Euphrates in what is now Iraq is often called the "Cradle of Civilization", but it is thought that more civilizations developed around the same time in the fertile crescent. According to the following timeline, that would have been between 10,000 B.C. and 4,000 B.C, but there were agricultural settlements as early as 12,000 B.C.

"The cradle of civilization is any of the possible locations for the emergence of civilization. It is usually applied to the Ancient Near Eastern Chalcolithic (Ubaid period, Naqada culture), especially in the Fertile Crescent (viz. Lower Egypt, the Levant and Mesopotamia), but also extended to sites in Anatolia and the Persian Plateau, besides other Asian cultures situated along large river valleys, notably the Indus River in Indian Subcontinent and the Yellow River in China."

"The earliest signs of a sedentarization process can be traced back to the Mediterranean region to as early as 12000 BC, when the Natufian culture became sedentary and evolved into an agricultural society by 10000 BC."

Homo sapiens - 400,000 to 200,000 years BCE
Homo sapiens neandertalensis - 200,000 to 30,000 years BCE
Homo sapiens sapiens - 130,000 years BCE to present

10,000 B.C.
Semi-permanent agricultural settlements in Old World.
10,000–4,000 B.C.
Development of settlements into cities and development of skills such as the wheel, pottery, and improved methods of cultivation in Mesopotamia and elsewhere.
5500–3000 B.C.
Predynastic Egyptian cultures develop (5500–3100 B.C.); begin using agriculture (c. 5000 B.C.). Earliest known civilization arises in Sumer (4500–4000 B.C.). Earliest recorded date in Egyptian calendar (4241 B.C.).

Now, I'd also like to point out that we know (as fact) that there are stone monoliths in Russia and the "Gaelic" regions of Europe dating back 12,000 years. This would be a form of "culture".

So, pretty much, your argument that the Earth is only 7000 years old is bullshit. It's 157 years old, and NEVER ages. Kifflom!

Now my question is: if we were around for 130,000 years and can only account for (at most) 12,000, wtf were we doing for the other 118,000 years? Jacking off? Don't think so.
 Quoting: Bugsy Moran


Amen

I'd put Homo Sapien as we are at around 36,000 years not 120, that''s just my belief based on my studies.

But

that leaves 3 11,000 years cycles to account for

we have one accounted for ours

and we know for fact at this point from sites off India Cuba, America, japan that we lost a global civilization around 11,000 years ago

and I thin most of the older strange artifacts we find must be from the first civilization

Just my thoughts

but your dead on my friend, even with my... extremely shortened version we have 30,000 years missing from our history
 Quoting: superdave


Consider if you will that Solar Doom would completely knock out any electronics as well as cause untold destruction to the planet. It would drive whatever species wandered the Earth into the stone age.
 Quoting: Bugsy Moran


You know i'm pretty darn sure the Comet strike over Canada was the cause of the "great flood" "the end of the ice age" "the 100ft + rise in sea level" etc, etc

What's your call on it?

Purely solar, or some outer body periodically disturbs things a bit

(and I say "a bit" because we are here)

But it seems whatever the heck is going on it's an 11-12,000 yr cycle and most of the time it's not all that extreme, volcano and Earthquakes really don't destroy "life" don't often cause extinction.

It seems though whatever is happening we end up getting landed on too... sometimes at least and this is the biggest threat

Do you think increased activity on the sun alone could cause the orbits of things as far away as the kuiper to be disturbed?

Or do you believe in an outer solar hypothesis for the suns increased activity and the rest?
 
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