rich: The first two links below do not work!
regards mhb On Wed, Jan 13, 2010 at 1:07 AM, Rich Murray <[email protected]> wrote: > I'd like to present these hundreds of fine color images on the large screen > in a weekly evening gathering at SF Complex for shared discussion. > > awesome evidence (Google Earth images, stereo pairs, some videos) from > Mexico to Canada for 500 km comet rubble pile air impacts 12950 BP --Dennis > Cox: Rich Murray 2010.01.13 > http://rmforall.blogspot.com/2010_01_01_archive.htm > Wednesday, January 13, 2010 > http://groups.yahoo.com/group/astrodeep/message/35 > _____________________________________________________ > > > December 16, 2009 at 2:32 pm > > > http://anthropology.net/2009/12/16/more-clovis-comet-debate-and-a-response-from-dr-richard-firestone-2/#comment-15812 > > craterhunter added a new comment to the post More Clovis > Comet Debate and a Response from Dr.Richard Firestone. > > craterhunter said on More Clovis Comet Debate and > a Response from Dr.Richard Firestone > > January 10, 2010 at 2:27 pm > > If it is ok to take a firm stand on one side of the debate, or the other, > I'll cast my lot with Dr. Firestone, and friends. > I was trained to do battle damage assessment in the military. > And it has been an interest ever since. > A long time ago, when the first LandSat images became available to > the general public, I noticed some explosive blast effects in the > southwest US, and central Mexico that couldn't be believably > explained by standard theory in the light of the new hi-res > satellite images. > At the time I knew nothing of any work on the > Younger Dryas cooling. > And it was long before anyone had proposed fragmented > comet impacts. > But it was a wonderful conundrum. > I knew I was looking at the ground effects of an unimaginably > violent event that flew in the face everything I had ever learned. > And I knew of no natural energy release to account for them. > For that matter I knew of no kind of natural energy release at all > that could do what I was seeing. > The ground effects, and blast effected materials, I had noticed all > seemed to point to something that happened around the end of the > last Ice age. > And, when I learned of work on the Younger Dryas Boundary layer, > and the nano-diamonds R.B. Firestone et al, and others had found > there, I realized they confirmed some of what I had found. > It confirmed, if nothing else, that an event of the level of destruction > I was looking at did indeed happen. > And recently enough too. > >> From what I can see R.B. Firestone et al are spot on. >> > There is no end to the theories related to to the so called > Younger Dryas impact event. > Some are good, and some not so good. > And I've no doubt, you have heard them all by now. > But here's a fresh viewpoint that looks at the actual ground effects of > such an event from a fluid mechanics / blast analysis point of view: > > http://sites.google.com/site/dragonstormproject/ > > Dennis Cox -- awesome site with hundreds of quality Google Earth > photos, some stereo images, and a few short videos > > > > http://craterhunter.wordpress.com/the-planetary-scaring-of-the-younger-dryas-impact-event/the-benivides-impact-structure/ > > A CATASTROPHE OF COMETS > THE GEOPHYSICAL WORLD ACORDING TO ME, > AND A FEW FOLKS I HAPPEN TO AGREE WITH > > The Benavides Impact Structure > The explosive process that did this has never been studied before. > > The semi circular ring of The Benavides Impact Structure is 17 miles > wide. > Just accros the border from Terlingua, Texas, and Big Bend > National Park, USA. > The perfect semi-circle was the first anomalous land form I noticed > in the satelite images. > It was obvious that it is the result of a violent explosive event that > standard theory can't properly describe. > And my obsessive curiosity wouldn't let me leave it alone. > > The maps show this area to be volcanic due to the melt formations. > But there is no volcanic vent here so the violence did not come from > below. > The 17 mile ring, as well as the smaller, overlapping, 8 mile wide > impressions are all perfect circles incised into the surface from above. > The mega-breccias and ignimbrites outside the structure were blown > there by a great force of heat and pressure which scoured everything > from inside the circles and cut into the surface like a giant cookie > cutter. > And the heat inside the circles was enough to re-weld the fractures > in the rock. > > Here we begin to see some of the clear evidence of the predominant > southeast to morthwest direction of the impact firestorm in the > directional nature of the breccias, and other blast effected materials > of this structure. > > Outside of the southeast edge of the structure, the pressure driven, > blast effected, materials were thrown into the super-sonic impact > wind so they piled up outside the compression wave of the explosion > in a standing wave of mega breccias > > The breccias are heaped 800 to 1000 ft high. > > On the opposite side, outside of the northwest edge of the structure > are repeated blankets of ejecta, and ignimgrites thrown down wind > 10 miles, or more. > > The melted material did not come out of the ground. > There is no vent here. > Whatever the heat source may have been it was not volcanic. > The melt blankets of ejecta, consist of the original surface terrain, > flash melted from above, and quickly blown off, and away, > from its points of origin. > > The white line in the bottom left is 1 mile for scale. > > These are stereoscopic images. > Click on them for an enlarged view. > To see the 3D effect simply focus on the center line, and cross your > eyes a little, until a 3D image seems to appear in the middle. > > Looking down to the southeast from about 45 km up. > > The inter-fingering patterns of movement, and flow in the edges of > these blankets of melt are consistent with sudden emplacement > like impact melt ejected from a crater. > > Looking west, down the valley formed by the ring, we see the > mega-brecias on the up-wind side of the structure. > > Volcanoes don't do this. > > PUBLISHED ON DECEMBER 28, 2009 AT 4:14 PM > > COMMENTS > > > http://www.authorstream.com/User-Presentations/DragonHunter/ > > Joined: 25 Nov 2009 > Last Login: 1 month ago DragonHunter 's Channels > Dragon Hunter > Subscribe to author's > Rss Feed DragonHunter 's Categories > All > Science & Technology > > DragonHunter's Podcasts > > http://www.google.com/profiles/cloviscometfirestorm > > Dennis Cox [ photo ] > Independant Geological Research > Fresno, California > > About me > Where I grew up -- central California > Places I've lived -- Montana, Washington, North Dakota > > > http://theholocenecomet.blogspot.com/ > > FRIDAY, JANUARY 1, 2010 > The planetary scaring of the Younger Dryas impact event. > > "...Our impactors appear to have been a large, highly fragmented, > and loosely grouped, cluster, about 500 km wide, like a giant, > flying gravel pile. > The thing would have looked like a sister to the images of the > fragments of comet Linear seen here. > It came in at very high velocity, and low angle of approach from > the southeast. > And almost all of the fragments exploded above ground like > Tunguska. > Except that, in Mexico, only the very first of the fragments on the > leading edge fell into cold atmosphere. > The rest fell into already super heated impact plasma, and just > added to the heat. > > The primary impact zone is a 500 by 1300 km oval that covers > most of north central Mexico. > And extends well up into west Texas, and New Mexico. > > The other impact zone is a little smaller in the great lakes region. > And it extends from northern Minnesota, well up into Canada...." > > > http://tmgnow.com/TMG1/?p=240 The Millenium Group > > A Different Kind of Catastrophe > garydgoodwin December 28, 2009 > Tags: Asteroid, Catastrophe, Comet, Dinosaur Extinction, Impact, > Younger Dryas Boundary > This entry, I would like to introduce a guest writer -- Dennis Cox. > I was very impressed with his theories of a Different Kind of > Catastrophe! > He not only comes through with a new theory, but research > to back it up > Please give him an opportunity! > And Thanks, Dennis, for a very well written article. > > "...In New Mexico at the northern edge of the primary impact zone > there are crater fields with too many craters to count about the size > of a football field. > They are on the other side of the state from any ordinance testing. > And they are described in the maps, and literature simply as > "enigmatic depressions".. Let's see, perfectly round, punched > into the surface from above, yep! pretty darned enigmatic to me. > But only if you don't believe in giant, geologically significant, > multiple fragment, thermal impact events. > > I've also cataloged more than 700 non-standard impact structures > that are more consistent with the hot, and powerful, surface > detonation of a shaped thermal explosive charge than anything > from we thought we knew about impact events, or possible > compositions of bolides. > > Depending on the strength of the surface, and the size of the > detonation, the blast burns grade from a deep, thermal burn > to a full fledged crater. > And they are square. > That's right, I said square, with a capital "S", square. > No two are exactly alike. > And the ones that only show a thermal blast burn without excavating > a crater make it clear that the square shape is a product of the > detonation burn pattern. > Not the result of patterned fracturing in the surface rock. > > Here are links to the image set of square blast burns, and craters, > in roughly 100 image, gallery segments. > As well as a few ordinary round ones. > They are in no particular order, as they were saved pretty much in > the order they were found. > There may even be a duplicate, here and there. > And this is by no means a complete inventory of them. > > 1 to 100, 101 to 200, 201 to 300, 301 to 400, 401 to 500, > 501 to 600, 601 to 700 and Crater Field. > (These last two galleries are a work in progress) > > http://www.dropbox.com/gallery/2268163/1/Sq1?h=da1edb > 5 pages of 20 large color Google Earth images of craters # 1 to 100 > > I'm still hoping for a seasoned physicist to weigh in on them. > So share them around as you see fit...." > ___________________________________________________ > > > exact Carolina Bay crater locations, RB Firestone, A West, et al, > two YD reviews, 2008 June, 2009 Nov, > also 3 upcoming abstracts: Rich Murray 2009.11.14 > http://rmforall.blogspot.com/2009_11_01_archive.htm > Saturday, November 14, 2009 > http://groups.yahoo.com/group/astrodeep/message/31 > > nanodiamond evidence for 12,900 BP Clovis extinction impact, > Santa Rosa Island, discussion on Scientific American website, > Carolina Bay type craters east of Las Vegas, NM: > Rich Murray 2009.09.15 > http://rmforall.blogspot.com/2009_06_01_archive.htm > Friday, July 24, 2009 > http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AstroDeep/28 > > widespread Carolina Bay type craters from Clovis comet > 12,900 Ya BP? -- 0.7 M long NS crater with fractured > red sandstone on SW rim, CR C 53A, 20 miles E of > Las Vegas, NM: Rich Murray 2009.06.08 > http://rmforall.blogspot.com/2009_06_01_archive.htm > Monday, June 8, 2009 > http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AstroDeep/27 > _____________________________________________________ > > Rich Murray, MA > Boston University Graduate School 1967 psychology, > BS MIT 1964, history and physics, > 1943 Otowi Road, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505 > 505-501-2298 [email protected] > > http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AstroDeep/messages > > http://RMForAll.blogspot.com new primary archive > > http://groups.yahoo.com/group/aspartameNM/messages > group with 142 members, 1,588 posts in a public archive > > http://groups.yahoo.com/group/rmforall/messages > > participant, Santa Fe Complex www.sfcomplex.org > _____________________________________________________ > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College > lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org >
============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org
