Alll of the reseach teams who have said a comet caused the Holocene were absolutly correct. The search for the impact site is over. And the impact was more devastating than we could ever have possibly imagined
I found the Impact site we’ve all been looking for. It was a broken comet string like SL-9. It’s been right under our feet all along. But the stupendous size of the thing is beyond comprehension. And that is why we never realized what we were standing on. And until we saw Shoemaker-Levy 9 hit Jupiter, it would have been incomprehensible.
All of this time we've all been like fleas on an elephants back, who, when asked what they were standing on, replied; "Why, this is our world of course!" We just needed to get a little distance. Simply turn on Google Earth set it to the highest resolution you can, open your eyes, then zoom out to about 1300 miles, prepare yourself for a mind bending change in the way you perceive our mother-world, and then look closely at the eastern USA. We will all need to rethink everything we thought knew about landform creation. Be warned; after seeing it you will never be the same again. The impact sequence begins at Marshal lake, Alabama, USA. And then progresses to the north east. There are Two concentric explosion compression wave rings; one at about 250 miles in diameter. The other is about 360 miles diameter. The first few impacts only partially melted the material in the crater and thus an impact fracture star in the crust remains which is the lake. Then it started to get violent. Another big one hit, creating another tremendous compression wave when it hit in the crater melt to the north east, heating the melt enough that this time it splashes up, out, and in front of it. Looking like plops in a lava stream the impacts continue in a relentless stream 80 or 90 miles wide all the way up into Maine. Each one heating the melt still more and progressively kicking it out in front forming all of the ropey-folded land forms we see there today. It probably consisted of a string of comet fragments. And you can see clearly that it came in from the southwest at a point angled about 45 degrees to the plane of the ecliptic. And the rest of the world will need to check me on this. But some of the pieces must have been many miles wide. The string probably included the whole comet but anything smaller then that is like looking for the footprints of a baby in the mud after the whole family has walked by. It looks to me like it happened in about an hour. But in that hour whole mountain ranges we've always thought were immeasurably ancient and eroded remnants of big ones like the Himalayas were plopped down. Study the location I’ve described very closely, and carefully. Do you see what I see? I am passionate about the need for doing good sound, repeatable science. But a clearly observable fact shouldn't need any more proof than "Hey everyone, look at that!" Much good sound science has already been done and published by many of our best and brightest scientists on the trail of the Holocene extinction. Whose data show conclusively that just such a thing did indeed happen about 12,000 years ago. They've been sweating in the field and in their labs for a long time now. And have done much good, work. Some have devoted their careers to the search. Who have thought that ordinary man, armed only with a good eye, and a willingness to trust and believe that something so many good scientists have described so well must be here somewhere would validate all their hard work with the simple words; "Hey! You guys were right! Look what I found!"? Just imagine that day. I can't wrap mind my mind around this. We've all known for some time now that some thing caused a mass extinction. Would you look at it? You could time the sequence down to the second by the earth’s rotation. Imagine the tremendous scale of those impacts and the energy of the explosions they must have produced. Think of the death and destruction they must have caused. The Mastodons and all of that beautiful life that lived with them, all of them, they were all dead and gone, in minutes. Oh my dearest God. Why did you make me the first to see this?