Re: U of South Carolina Releases Topper Radiocarbon Dates

From: IE Johansson (inger_x_e.johansson_at_telia.com)
Date: 11/27/04


Date: Sat, 27 Nov 2004 05:32:31 GMT

Daryl and Bob,
last years studies and analyses have shown other and southern strips to have
been at hand during last Ice Age than which is presented by the old paradigm
in that respect. And yes one of those strips/or streams entered northern
parts of Virginia. I find it odd that you who are supposed to know about
these things haven't had access to those studies and analyses. They have
been mentioned at least twice on Discovery Channel no matter that I had had
the information in advance months before.

Inger E

"Daryl Krupa" <icycalmca@yahoo.com> skrev i meddelandet
news:c70365ef.0411262115.1568197@posting.google.com...
> "Bob Keeter" <rkeeter@earthlink.net> wrote in message
news:<eEInd.6693$pK6.1671@newsread2.news.atl.earthlink.net>...
> > "IE.Johansson" <ingerx_e.johanssonx@telia.com> wrote in message
> > news:ynCnd.9124$d5.79592@newsb.telia.net...
> > Snippage. . . .
> >
> > >> Do an on line search for ice ages. The glaciers never made it into
Dixie.
> > >
> > > deowll,
> > > I did such but I don't trust url's on net that much as many do. I
would
> > > like
> > > to be sure. Know persons who seen indication that there have been Ice
Coat
> > > melting and expending on cliffs in nortern parts of Carolina. It's not
so
> > > long ago that scholars missed part of the Ice Coat extention in the
Old
> > > World. Both areas to which the Ice Coat directly or indirectly from
the
> > > impact of the ice rivers reached and areas which fro some reason or an
> > > other
> > > wasn't harmed at all.
> > >
> > > Inger E
> > >
> >
> > If you do manage to find a URL or book that you can trust, I think that
you
> > will find that the last few rounds of glaciers never really made it past
the
> > western mountains in Virginia, North Carolina and perhaps the far
western
> > extremes of South Carolina., and even there the evidence (i.e things
that
> > look to be "transported bolders", and such) is very scant. Where
present, I
> > think that the "common knowledge" is that these are likely "mountain
> > glaciers" rather than the big continental glaciers of an ice age.
> >
> > http://www.virginiaplaces.org/geology/glaciers.html
> >
> > Just a suggestion of a URL to look at. . . . .
> >
> > Certainly not a scientific study but. . . . . . .When growing up I
crawled
> > over a lot of hills in western NC and did not find much for glacial-like
> > residue..
> >
> > Regards
> > bk
>
>
> Another two mapps of glacial extent:
>
> Figs. 1 and 2, here, show maximal Laurentide Ice *** extent:
>
> The southern Laurentide Ice ***
>
> http://www.geology.wisc.edu/~davem/abstracts/03-25.pdf
>
> Fig. 3, here, shows mid-Wisconsinan Laurentide Ice *** extent
> (which is about where it would have lain 50,000 years ago),
> inside the maximal extent in the Late Wisconsinan:
>
> The Laurentide and Innuitian ice sheets during the
> Last Glacial Maximum
>
>
http://www.geo.oregonstate.edu/people/faculty/clark_publications/Dykeetal-QS
R2002.pdf
>
> The second article is a standard reference, by one of the premier
> authorities on the subject, in a well-respected peer-reviewed journal
> dedicated to the topic.
>
> Daryl Krupa


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