Sea waterlevels. former Re: Questions



Eric, Alan and Erik,
I have spoken to more than one scholar in this question. They say as I do
and agree that I
provided enough ref and data. they have same copy as you had Alan and have
thus had exactly same chances as you to comprehend and look up.

Yesterday I also provided sites where you had you read it thru couldn't miss
EXACT same data as I refered to being used by the Swedish Report. That's
incredible that you don't understand this basic information. (btw when I was
in 5th grade we had the same information as you had yesterday but in Swedish
of course and with one or two more tables with x-axel = year and y-axel =
meter fluctation.
I can't remember one single of my schoolmates, neither one single of the
students I have had over the years not having understood this directly and
the majority of them all haven't had problems reading the tables you seem to
have missed were to be found had you taken time to go thru at least the US
Government site carefully. It's all there:
a) after Ice Age the ice melted and at one point the sealevel started to
rise. Also the process for that to happen can be found in the urls.
b) when the water in it's normal circle as usual tries to reach the lowest
point in terrain and or out in sea, this also results in changed
ground-water. So first there were a lot of water rising the levels at sea
and at the same time the groundwater reached it's lowest value. This
happened short before the Bronze Age, as you all can read about in the
texts. If you followed the links you would have known that this happened
around 2700 BC.
c) water -> steam etc in other words in the water's normal cycle the water
'rises' as steam fogg etc from the large sea-areas all around the world and
falls in later stage down as rain or snow. In this sequence of the repeated
process/cycle the water fallen tries to reach it's lowest point and thus the
ground-water levels rise which continued over a long period to the last
millenium of the Bronze Age. at which point the groundwater and terrain
couldn't absorve more water and thus the impact is a new sealevel rise. This
time approx 15 meter. Consensus have existed and still exist for all who
have studied this for 12-15 meter. Most arrives to 15 meter. This started as
you if you looked closer at the tables, to which the site had links, during
the last 200 years of the Bronze Age.

Some scholars in older days as well as now believe this to have been the
reason why the Cimbrians started to move late 4th to 3rd century BC. But in
my mind it's a bit too late.
One of the sources referring to this is Nordisk Familjebok.
http://runeberg.org/nfbe/0183.html
"Mot slutet af 2:a årh. f. Kr. utvandrade (måhända på grund af
öfversvämningar) större delen af dem med kvinnor och barn för att i
sydligare trakter söka sig nya bostäder. "

Now it's correct that we didn't hear much about the Cimbrians before 200 BC,
but they had started to move southward on Jutland one or two hundred years
earlier, shown by many artifacts from excavations. So it's at least possible
that it was due to the sealevel rise mentioned and discussed which had it's
peak around 500 BC.

Inger E



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