According to several dating methods, many petroglyphs were created around 12,000 years ago during the Younger Dryas, roughly a thousand-year period when the climate of half the Earth suddenly cooled.
In context, petroglyphs are substantial proof that the Younger Dryas was a plasma storm event. As is the geology and the condition of frozen remains of animals caught in the maelstrom. Megafauna were nearly wiped-out. The landscape made desolate, raised by fire and flood.
Some humans who survived the cataclysm did so in Anatolia, Turkey at one of the earliest constructions of an organized society discovered so far, Göbekli Tepe—dated to 9,700 BC at the end of the Younger Dryas. New sites continue to be uncovered with earlier dates, indicating some of them were occupied even prior to the Younger Dryas event.
Plasma storms shook the Earth and erupted the guts out of it by raising it’s internal potential, while cyclones formed at the feet of giant columns of auroral light. The visions they saw are what is recorded in myths, glyphs, columns and statues.
Author and engineer Andrew Hall considers the repeating forms of Nature as the rule, not the exception—because Nature is circuitry. Our bodies and every plant and animal on Earth work on circuitry. Our planet’s electric bubble lives inside the Sun’s electric bubble, called the heliosphere. Nested spheres of circuitry repeat at the galactic and cosmic scales. Everything is electric.





