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Eemian climate optimum and deep prehistoric golden age
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tholden
- Posts: 1017
- Joined: Thu Jul 03, 2008 1:02 am
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tholden
- Posts: 1017
- Joined: Thu Jul 03, 2008 1:02 am
Cause of gollden ages??
A few of the conjectures i seem to be coming up with...
The xfer of humans from Ganymede to Earth likely coincided with the Eemian climate optimum, warmer than the holocene.
That may have also coincided with another golden age, similar to the classical golden age of Greco-Roman literature, with the climate optimum and the hypothesized Eemian golden age somehow being brought about by the original near approach of the Saturnian system to the Jupiter/sun system.
Those first humans from Ganymede got dumped into the middle of the Pacific ocean. It had to have been both warm enough and bright enough for them to have survived with their lack of fur and night vision. The Eemian golden age, if it happened, would have been temporary but humans would have had time to adjust to the normal dark Saturnian conditions as they returned.
I also believe those first humans were rescued by whales and other aquatic mammals and that they would not have survived on their own in the middle of the Pacific.
One question.....
What exactly would cause a golden age, either the Holocene/Greco-Roman version or this hypothetical Eemian version? Would it have amounted to the entire dwarf star (Saturn0having gone into some sort of glow mode??
The xfer of humans from Ganymede to Earth likely coincided with the Eemian climate optimum, warmer than the holocene.
That may have also coincided with another golden age, similar to the classical golden age of Greco-Roman literature, with the climate optimum and the hypothesized Eemian golden age somehow being brought about by the original near approach of the Saturnian system to the Jupiter/sun system.
Those first humans from Ganymede got dumped into the middle of the Pacific ocean. It had to have been both warm enough and bright enough for them to have survived with their lack of fur and night vision. The Eemian golden age, if it happened, would have been temporary but humans would have had time to adjust to the normal dark Saturnian conditions as they returned.
I also believe those first humans were rescued by whales and other aquatic mammals and that they would not have survived on their own in the middle of the Pacific.
One question.....
What exactly would cause a golden age, either the Holocene/Greco-Roman version or this hypothetical Eemian version? Would it have amounted to the entire dwarf star (Saturn0having gone into some sort of glow mode??
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Re: Eemian climate optimum and deep prehistoric golden age
All Gas Giants are Stars that are not in Light mode. Whether they never made it, or did once and could be again, is up to the winds of the void.
interstellar filaments conducted electricity having currents as high as 10 thousand billion amperes
"You know not what. .. Perhaps you no longer trust your feelings,." Michael Clarage
"Charge separation prevents the collapse of stars." Wal Thornhill
"You know not what. .. Perhaps you no longer trust your feelings,." Michael Clarage
"Charge separation prevents the collapse of stars." Wal Thornhill
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