https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laurentide_Ice_Sheet
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-W6Lftgq8mg
co2 levels were 280ppm when it all melted away in less than 4000 years. 130 ppm co2 lower than it is now, so co2 obviously had nothing to do with it. 800+ feet thick.
>>131530711
>The Laurentide Ice Sheet was a massive sheet of ice that covered millions of square kilometers, including most of Canada and a large portion of the northern United States, multiple times during the Quaternary glacial epochs— from 2.588 ± 0.005 million years ago to the present.
sage
This is what the coastlines looked like 12,000 years ago. Sea level was 400 feet lower. Before the great big melt with co2 levels at 280ppm.
>>131530945
how did it melt so fast 12,000 years ago?
>>131530711
JFK on Weather Control at 1961 UN General Assembly
https://youtu.be/PqPKmtCII1Y
Laurentide ice SHEEEIIITTT.
>>131530711
Pole shift
>>131530711
0.7 W/m2 from insolation + 3 W/m2 from wellmixed greenhouse gases + 3.5 W/m2 from ice-albedo feedback
>>131530711
(((randall carlson)))
>>131530711
Most likely a large meteor broke up. There is evidence that around 12000 years ago we had our first impacts with additional impacts every few centuries up to perhaps 2,000 years ago or less (its believed Tungusta was part of the same broken meteor). There was at least 2 massive impacts one around 12000 and another around 10000BC, its theorized another around 3000BC caused the bronze age collapse and another around 100BC may have ushered in the dark ages. Famine and population displacement always go hand in hand with a meteor impact.
>>131530711
so newyork was frozen when man was in the area and had modern technology. that makes a number of things in history seem unlikely.
the automobile hasnt been a thing for very long OP
>>131530945
It's against the rules to announce a sage.
If someone were to report you, it could result in a ban.
>>131530711
Is Randal saying the sudden boundary between the Holocene and Pleistocene is when pieces of a comet hit western Canada? I'd like to see his evidence
>>131530711
You got my hopes up until I realized that map was the past and not the near future.
>>131530711
A giant fragment from a comet impacted the sheet. That's why there is no crater.
>>131539558
in the same way the comet destroyed all the evidence for Hancock's lost civilization
that's very convenient