Graham Hancock on What Could Be HIDDEN In Antarctica

FLAGRANT CLIPS13 minutes read

Antarctica holds secrets of a lush, green past, challenging the belief of it always being frozen, with theories of Earth crust displacement and comet impacts explaining past climate changes and global cataclysms in recent human history. The sudden drop in climate, extinction of Ice Age megafauna, and sea level rise around 12,800 years ago align with comet impact theories, potentially disrupting historical timelines and triggering major events like Atlantis.

Insights

  • Antarctica holds evidence of a lush, green past 90 million years ago, challenging the assumption of it always being frozen, indicating significant climate changes over time.
  • The younger dryas impact hypothesis, suggesting a cataclysm around 12,800 years ago due to comet fragments, is favored over Earth crust displacement for explaining global changes, aligning with a sudden climate shift and sea level rise during that period.

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Recent questions

  • What is the younger dryas impact hypothesis?

    A cataclysm around 12,800 years ago caused by comet fragments.

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Summary

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Antarctica's Mysteries: Climate, Cataclysms, and History

  • Antarctica is becoming a popular topic, with a friend sharing experiences of the mountains looking pointy and four-sided, contrary to expectations from maps and penguin sightings.
  • There is a pact among countries with Antarctic territories not to extract minerals, with a warning that breaking this pact could trigger World War III.
  • Fossils found on Antarctica suggest a lush, green past, possibly 90 million years ago, challenging the belief that it has always been frozen.
  • Charles Hapgood's theory of Earth crust displacement proposes the outer crust shifting, potentially explaining past climate changes and ancient maps.
  • The younger dryas impact hypothesis, focusing on a cataclysm around 12,800 years ago caused by comet fragments, is favored over Earth crust displacement for explaining global changes.
  • A sudden drop in climate and release of water into the world ocean 12,800 years ago aligns with the comet impact hypothesis, cutting the Gulf Stream and causing extreme cold.
  • The extinction of Ice Age megafauna around 11,600 years ago coincides with a rapid warming period, possibly due to multiple comet impacts.
  • The sudden warming and sea level rise 11,600 years ago, known as melt water pulse 1B, could be attributed to a comet fragment impact in a world ocean, creating a greenhouse effect.
  • The global cataclysm at the end of the Ice Age, lasting over a thousand years, is a significant event in relatively recent human history, with potential connections to Atlantis and historical timelines.
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