On Jul 20, 10:23*am, Eric Chomko wrote:
On Jul 16, 4:02*pm, Brad Guth wrote:
On Jul 16, 9:31*am, LSMFT wrote:
wrote:
"The brightest explosion of a star ever seen
temporarily blinded a satellite set up to watch
such events, astronomers said on Wednesday."
See:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20100715/...us_space_burst
Wait until we have one in the local group.
--
LSMFT
I haven't spoken to my wife in 18 months.
I don't like to interrupt her.
65 million years ago we had to survive Sirius(B).
No Guth, there is no proof that the asteroid that was ~ six miles
across that struck the earth 65 million years ago, that killed of the
dinosaurs, was from Sirius, B or otherwise.
And there's still no objective proof that it wasn't from Sirius B or
via some other Sirius star that lost its tidal radii grip of planets w/
moons plus whatever asteroids.
Exactly where was our solar system in relation to Sirius as of 65 MYBP
and before, and how long would the interstellar trek of rogue items
released from its red supergiant phase be?
While you're at it, tell us how and when we got our Arctic ocean basin
and that nifty seasonal tilt.
Tell us how and when our moon/Selene got that 2500 km diameter crater,
that just so happens to match up with our Arctic ocean basin.
I mean, shouldn't there otherwise be an Arctic land mass similar to
Antarctica?
You do realize the oldest trees in North America are only a few
thousand years old, and by no means much of anything else is older
than 11,712 years, as though something pretty downright significant
had previously taken place.
“The record holders for an individual non-clonal tree are Great Basin
Bristlecone Pine trees from California and Nevada in the United
States, dated 4,000 to 5,000 years old by counting tree rings.”
Other trees sufficiently distant from the Artic date to near 50,000
years, and that’s quite an unusual 10:1 disparity for a planet that’s
not supposed to have changed it’s seasonal tilt or much less its
orbit.
Most clonal colonies are worth something less than 13,000 YBP.
Do you have any really old cave-life era art or impressions of our
moon, or anything pertaining to seasons that had to have been pretty
darn significant with all of that melting glacial ice and subsequent
erosion taking place?
How the hell did those cave dwellers manage to sleep through all of
that?
Were such early humans a nearly blind as well as a totally dumbfounded
species?
Are you suggesting those unintelligent early humans somehow knew
exactly how to best survive the last ice-age better than anything
else, and therefore cared less than **** about any stinking moon,
having to bother with seasonal changes or the unusual lack of whatever
local vegetation?
In other words, are you and other Semites actually that freaking nuts?
Are you suggesting that our human evolution that involved any real
intelligence didn’t take off until sometime well after that last ice-
age?
When exactly did this perpetually dumbfounded human species become
self-aware, and thus previously having been unaware of their
environment that apparently didn’t include a moon or any significant
seasons?
~ BG