Ancient Crash, Epic Wave
avtchillsboro writes "A NY Times article says that scientists have discovered evidence a massive impact crater 18 miles in diameter and 12,500 feet under the Indian Ocean. The evidence, they say, consists of four massive chevron-shaped sediment deposits on the island of Madagascar. 'Each covers twice the area of Manhattan with sediment as deep as the Chrysler Building is high. On close inspection, the chevron deposits contain deep ocean microfossils that are fused with a medley of metals typically formed by cosmic impacts. And all of them point in the same direction — toward the middle of the Indian Ocean where a newly discovered crater, 18 miles in diameter, lies 12,500 feet below the surface.' Interestingly, the scientists say that the currently accepted notion that there have been no major impacts in the last 10,000 years is wrong; and that major impacts occur on average every 1,000 years, rather than the currently accepted 500,000 to 1,000,000 year interval. '(T)he self-described "band of misfits" that make up the two-year-old Holocene Impact Working Group say that astronomers simply have not known how or where to look for evidence of such impacts along the world's shorelines and in the deep ocean.'"
This is somewhat troubling. Before these people went looking, we assumed we had somewhere between now and 10,000 AD or so before the next major impact. (mangling the fine art of statistics, I know) Now, they're saying it could be a thousand years or less between impacts. When was the last major impact? We could be due for a serious catastrophe in very short order, practically instantaneous in geological terms.
I'm certainly not reassured by the fact that we only monitor about 3% of the sky. Sure, we think we know about every significant object that approaches Earth, but that doesn't account for rogue objects (those with either highly elliptical or hyperbolic orbits, or extrasolar objects that can't currently be tracked or predicted). Since FEMA is basically shite and lunar exploration/colonization is basically all hype at this point, what the hell are we going to do if we find out tomorrow that the world as we know it will shortly end?
Tinfoil hats aside, there's some excellent insight into scanning technology presented in the article. The idea of precisely scanning sea surface height to identify local gravitational variations interests me greatly. Just think about that for a little bit; let the sheer coolness of such remarkable precision sink in. It's also interesting to note that miles-wide craters have escaped our notice for millenia. Props for taking the obvious route and playing connect-the-dots with geological formations.
Of course, the doubt is strong already amongst the established scientific community. I'd say that since they've already done sediment tests for several sites and identified tektites neatly fused with diatoms (meteor debris melted to fossil plants), it's pretty clear that their methods are valid and are producing reliable results.
The note at the end of TFA about using Flood myths to date and place a major impact is particularly intriguing. Some of the 'researchers' that have taken the route of aggregate myth analysis have come up with some pretty questionable results, but in other cases, surprising correlations stand out. Consider that virtually every culture, living or dead, has a flood myth in some form or another. I think it's good for us all to be reminded that myths and legends are based on real people and events, however obsured by the ravages of time and creative retelling.
That's all I've got...
-1 raving lunatic; +6 subGenius... Things even out...
This happened only 4,800 years ago. The impact would have had global repercussions, so shouldn't it be reflected in written history, like in Egypt?
Dan East
Better known as 318230.
I'm surprised these people seem to be the first to start looking for impact craters in the Ocean, being as it covers 3/4 of the globe it stands to reason that 3/4 of all impacts are going to end up in the Ocean somewhere. Maybe it's just a case of only having the necessary technology available fairly recently but I think we ought to be doing everything we can to understand how often and how much damage asteroid strikes occur and can inflict.
Also the size of the Tsunami which created those chevrons must have been almost unimaginably huge but again its likely that for every impact of that size there would have been a lot more which haven't left such obvious signs but would still have been capable of inflicting similar destruction on coastal communities as the Indonesian Tsunami did a few years ago.
Although I think traditional science is a better method of investigating these sorts of incidents I think the idea of tracing back through myths and stories to reach an actual point in time where some group of people actually experienced the event is fascinating. Whether it's just wishful thinking or not and can ever be tied down this precisely is I think questionable.
Any event which caused waves of that size is pretty clearly going to make a big impression on anyone who witnessed any of its effects and would certainly have been talked about for a very long time but whether we can detect any of the story as it must have been originally told is, in my opinion, extremely unlikely.
They're at the south end of Madagascar. Worth a look, in fact at first glance a lot of the south-eastern coast looks like it is showing signs of where a tsunami washed inland a lot, but the chevrons are very clear when you find them. Also there appear to be some more chevrons at the top end of the country, at a different angle, but it's not my line of expertise so I may be wrong.
However it is a neat method of finding recent oceanic meteorite impacts. I don't know how long the chevrons would last - the bigger the impact the longer they'd last seems like an obvious insight though, and 600ft high chevrons would take a very long time to erode, ice ages notwithstanding.
Zecharia Sitchin has some interesting things to say about this very subject. I don't agree with everything he concludes, but the evidence he's dug up is most intriguing.
To be honest, I don't have a definite opinion on the subject of alien visitations. I haven't seen any solid evidence with my own eyes, but I've also never seen any counterevidence. On a theoretical basis, the thought that this is the only inhabited planet in the universe is a flat impossibility.
As for the fundies, denying scientific evidence that runs counter to your beliefs is just burying your head in the sand. It encourages further breaks from reality and lays the foundation for erratic, even psychotic, behavior.
I do, however, agree with you that there have been older civilizations far more advanced than we currently consider. It's like a tip-of-the-iceberg situation, much like the oceanic crater issue. We get these subtle hints and clues, both from the archaeological record and from our own most ancient myths and legends. Never a whole and complete site or city, though, demonstrating precisely what level of understanding was available. It's rather frustrating not to know the legacy of those who came before us.
-1 raving lunatic; +6 subGenius... Things even out...