Global Megaflood Science - by Dr. Vic Baker for IAFI

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 19. 11. 2020
  • July 16, 2020 presentation by Victor R Baker for the Lower Columbia Chapter of Ice Age Floods Institute
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 42

  • @MichealMireles
    @MichealMireles Před dnem

    Thank you for your time and knowledge Dr Vic Baker! You are a wonderful person

  • @mpetersen6
    @mpetersen6 Před 2 lety +9

    A couple of years ago I was sitting on the balcony of a hotel room in Traverse City watching the gentle waves come ashore. As they receded they would leave behind minature formations of the features we see in the landscapes affected by these floods.

    • @liamhackett513
      @liamhackett513 Před 2 lety +1

      Geologists talk about scale independence. A stream mimics the winding course a Mississippi could take. Fractal like.

  • @PlayNowWorkLater
    @PlayNowWorkLater Před 2 měsíci +1

    Vic Baker is such a concise and detailed storyteller, with a talent for weaving in an engaging narrative. Great stuff!

  • @davidduma7615
    @davidduma7615 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Nick sent me.

  • @kenmcclellan
    @kenmcclellan Před 2 lety +2

    Half a Precession ago, my Sinixt ancestors of British Columbia worried most about the approaching fire they had prepared for by digging caves near the Arrow Lakes. Well, I worry about the Conflagration and the next Megaflood ... and they have an expected season of 2022 to 2024. They were expected to accompany space rocks, earthquakes, volcanoes and tidal waves. I guess we will see. But it seems the last time it all went down, the Ancients left artwork showing when and where in the sky to watch it happen. The boiling flood came late in the Age of Gemini. The one from the window of heaven was nearly exactly one Ahau ago. Anyone note the paleolithic art on the stone at 15:00?

  • @liamhackett513
    @liamhackett513 Před 2 lety

    How many ice ages have receded, how many mega floods? A relatively common phenomena lying under our feet without us realising. Fascinating stuff.

  • @TheAnarchitek
    @TheAnarchitek Před měsícem

    When the BDR came too close, and literally dragged India across the bed of the nascent Indian Ocean, slamming it into the marshy fens of southern Asia, the impact displaced Asia, too, which rippled across the planet, dislodging ONAC, sending it down to slam into the Fractured Craton that held the Colorado Plateau, elevating Nunavik from sea-bottom, raising the Front Range, and sending a wall of water perhaps a half-mile high washing across southern Wyoming, and northern Colorado, across southern Idaho.
    This "flood" raced to the Sierra Nevada/Cascades chain, before turning southerly, to fill the Great Basin, with Lake Lahontan, and the Great Salt Lake, and an often-overlooked body I call Lake Anasazi, that sat atop the Four Corners, for about two millennia, before eating out the western volcanic plug in the Grand Canyon, to drain away. When that happened, the Anasazi walked away "in search of greener pastures". These events are spoken of, in our "oral history", a resource typically ignored by "scientists".
    The mega-floods were NOT caused by "ice sheets"! The water was "moving fast", because of the facts of their arrival, the conditions of "pre-Earth" (flatter, inland seas, and shifting plates due to water's weight!) Ice sheets were located at polar locations. Archaeologists have been saying for some time now, that wet clay adopts the magnetic signature of Earth, at the time of its firing, in the transformation to ceramic or pottery. SEVEN different locations for "magnetic north" have been found! We should talk!

  • @mpetersen6
    @mpetersen6 Před 5 měsíci

    The disctiption in Genesis about fountains of the deep and extended period of rain. Religous aspects aside it could describing the effects of an impact event in an ocean basin (1). First we would see very large tsunami. Followed by extended periods of rain due to all of the sea water blown into the atmosphere.
    1) One possible candidate being the Burckle structure in the Indian Ocean SE of Madagascar. That is if Burckle is an impact crater and can be dated to sometime in the last say 50k years.

  • @hertzer2000
    @hertzer2000 Před 3 lety

    All along the edge of the entire ice sheet was flooding. How much went where when?!

  • @LHoover
    @LHoover Před 3 lety

    There are some questions about the apparent skyscraping "ice Ridges" and if those are caused by celestial impacts given those particular regions show Exeptional amounts of impact cratering or just evidence of methane bursts from the permafrost layer. However a global strafing of impact sites stretching across multiple continents says splash freeze to me, "Stratospheric Tsunami" mixing with an atmospheric vaccum indentation caused by high velocity impacts or bounce off impacts (moon). Follow the flood heads all straddle cratering.

  • @lucasalexander4722
    @lucasalexander4722 Před 4 měsíci

    Oh. This presentation became fact-free right about the 47 minute. mark. Reduced to an old man barking.

  • @vwjet014
    @vwjet014 Před 2 lety

    Seems the Lake Missoula mystery will stay a mystery as long as you keep your nose to the earth. It is time to realize we are part of a cosmic environment that involves more than just the earth. Our ancestors looked to the heavens and so should we, with our sophisticated equipment.

  • @mpetersen6
    @mpetersen6 Před 2 lety

    Looking at the globe with the northern hemisphere at the 2:50 mark it would appear that the Bearing Land Bridge was iced over.

  • @jholt03
    @jholt03 Před měsícem

    Vick, if by some chance you ever read this I have two burning questions. Is solar energy alone sufficient to explain the rate at which the various ice sheets melted? Is there any evidence for some type of extraterrestrial impact into an ice sheet as a potential cause for any of these megafloods?

    • @grindupBaker
      @grindupBaker Před měsícem

      The proportions of the things that warmed Earth by 7.45 degrees from the last glaciation period (colloquial "ice age"), warming from 17,300 to 6,000 years ago are:
      0.5 +- 1 w/m**2 8% Milankovitch cycles orbital eccentricity, axial tilt & precession of the equinoxes changes
      forcing (what pulled the trigger that started it)
      3.5 +- 1 w/m**2 53% ice sheets & vegetation changes albedo-change feedback
      1.8 +- 0.3 w/m**2 27% CO2 change feedback
      0.4 +- 0.1 w/m**2 6% CH4 change feedback
      0.4 +- 0.1 w/m**2 6% N2O change feedback
      :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
      6.6 +- 1.5 w/m**2 total
      That 6.6 w/m**2 of total imbalance plus water vapour & cloud feedbacks is what increased Global Mean Surface Temperature (GMST) by 7.45 degrees from the depths of the glaciation period "Ice Age" 17,300 years ago to the Holocene Optimum 6,000 years ago, which is a factor of 7.45 / 6.6 = 1.13 degrees per w/m**2. It calculates to only 0.97 degrees per w/m**2 since 1750 because ocean-cloud pattern effect takes a few hundred years more (ocean spreads heat over several hundred years)

  • @LHoover
    @LHoover Před 3 lety

    This should have been in my prior comment, involving secrecy, the eye of Africa would have been swept away here correct and wow there it is.

  • @intrude1670
    @intrude1670 Před 3 lety +1

    How does a 2-3 ton rock come to be on a ice sheet large enough to ride down flood water?

    • @swirvinbirds1971
      @swirvinbirds1971 Před 3 lety +2

      Typically from landslides... And continental glaciers were MASSIVE.

    • @grandparocky
      @grandparocky Před 2 lety +1

      GO WATCH A VIDEO FROM GREENLAND ICEBERGS THAT IS HOW THE ICE IT IS RIDING ON IS MOUNTAIN SIZE

    • @mpetersen6
      @mpetersen6 Před 5 měsíci +1

      How much ice does it take to support a 1 ton boulder?

    • @liamhickey359
      @liamhickey359 Před měsícem

      Way bigger rocks than that can be ice rafted. Some people insist on crediting it to aliens or a long lost super race of humans.

  • @lennykoss8777
    @lennykoss8777 Před 2 lety

    🤔🤔🤔🤔

  • @e.priest8937
    @e.priest8937 Před 2 lety +1

    "Ice age floods INSTITUTE" doesn't sound weird to you? Ok

    • @ricardosmythe2548
      @ricardosmythe2548 Před 2 lety +2

      Any group of like minded individuals can form a group like this to put across their theories. It should be encouraged.

  • @DanEspresso
    @DanEspresso Před 3 lety

    Map at 34:00 doesn't include the floods that created sea otter valley or the laurentide abyss. HMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM

    • @MyTorturedEyes
      @MyTorturedEyes Před 3 lety

      I think you'll survive!...Perhaps you could add a link...

    • @LHoover
      @LHoover Před 3 lety

      There are some questions about the apparent skyscraping "ice Ridges" and if those are caused by celestial impacts given those particular regions show Exeptional amounts of impact cratering or just evidence of methane bursts from the permafrost layer. However a global strafing of impact sites stretching across multiple continents says splash freeze to me, "Stratospheric Tsunami" mixing with an atmospheric vaccum indentation caused by high velocity impacts or bounce off impacts (moon). Follow the flood heads all straddle cratering.

    • @DanEspresso
      @DanEspresso Před 3 lety +1

      @@LHoover Hey I didn't say anything about celestial impacts or anything about the largest meteor found in north america being a glacial erratic.

    • @LHoover
      @LHoover Před 3 lety +1

      Seems to me north america is the erratic appears like something went down here. How about that Mayan burial bronze in central china, armored mammoth, with parking brakes? Wow! Mars is highly relevant, yet time is so confusing. All in all great video and information. Thank you for putting this out here.

    • @SuperRobinjames
      @SuperRobinjames Před 2 lety

      @@LHoover hi, can you link or point to info on the armoured mammoth?

  • @TheShredartist
    @TheShredartist Před rokem

    Solutrean hypothesis lmao nope, sorry, didn't happen.