The following is a continuation from yesterday. This is the 5 facts that are interesting. This is from interestingengineering.com and written by Christopher McFadden:
"5 prodigious Pangaea facts
Looking for some more information on Pangaea? Then you've come to the right place.
Read on to find some more fascinating facts about Pangaea and the potential future of the planet's continents.
1. Pangaea may be reborn in the future
As we've already discussed, at the end of the Permian Period, all the major landmasses of the world were joined together into what geologists call Pangaea. During the Triassic Period (about 200 million years ago) this supercontinent began to break apart.
We'll discuss some of the current theories about why this happened in a moment, but the process (if watched from space in fast forward) would resemble a slow-motion explosion. The process starts slowly at first, with the formation of Laurasia and Gondwanaland as continents drifted apart, but things appear to rapidly accelerate from the Jurassic Period (1bout 150 million years ago) onwards.
By the end of the Cretaceous (about 65 million years ago), the basic building blocks of our modern continents are, more or less, recognizable and resemble massive shards of the shattered former supercontinent. Obviously, the "explosion" is happening on a single spherical plane, so the pieces are very limited in where they can travel in "space".
The chunks of the former Pangaea continue to spread across the surface of the Earth into the modern-day with India impacting the "underside" of Asia, the African chunk hitting Southern Europe, and the Americas conjoining. Incredibly, this process is nowhere near finished, and plate tectonics will change the features of our planet's surface well into the future.
It is notoriously difficult to predict what the future shape of Earth's landmasses may look like, but it appears another supercontinent is on the cards. Notionally called Pangaea Proxima, it is believed this new supercontinent will form roughly 200 million years in the future.
2. Pangaea would have been a land of extremes
Pangaea was so massive, that the climate would have varied enormously across it. The interior of the continent, for example, would likely have received very little rain and was probably incredibly arid and hot.
It is also important to note, that average temperatures at the time of Pangaewere incredibly high compared to those today. Scientists believe that temperatures were about 38 degrees Fahrenheit (20 degrees Celsius) hotter in the summer, and atmospheric carbon dioxide was five to 20 times greater than today.
Some modern studies using climate models have also shown that the interior of Pangaea was also probably very seasonal. A 2016 study, for example, used geological data from the Moradi Formation in Northern Niger.
The rocks here consist of layered fossilized soils (called, funnily enough, paleosols), to reconstruct the ecosystem and climate during the time period when Pangaea existed. They found that this region would have resembled the modern-day Namib Desert in Africa or Lake Eyre Basin in Australia.
Today, the climate in these regions is generally arid with short, recurring wet periods that occasionally included catastrophic flash floods.
As we know today, from the locations of fossil fuels initially formed in this period, other parts of the supercontinent would have been incredibly lush, dense, jungle-like areas. Those parts of Pangaea that now form the coal-rich areas of the United States and Europe were probably located on or near the equator and would have resembled the modern-day Amazon (except with very different plants and creatures).
The coastal regions wouldn't be too dissimilar to today with the exception of course, of now long-extinct fauna and flora.
3. Pangaea might have contributed to one of the world's worst mass extinctions
At the end of the Permian Period (circa 250 million years ago), one of the worst, if not the worst, mass extinction events devastated life on Earth. Estimates vary, but somewhere in the region of 70%-90% of all life was wiped off the face of the Earth.
The loss of life was so immense, that the event is generally known as "the Great Dying" and it formed the boundary between the Permian and Triassic periods.
Prior to the extinction event, the predominant form of life on land and in the sea were large reptiles and synapsids (mammal-like reptiles and our ancestors).
Geologists and paleontologists can't be entirely sure why this happened. Recent papers suggest volcanic activity led to the release of an immense amount of greenhouse gases, leading to global warming and ocean acidification on a vast scale.
However it occurred, the event changed life on our planet forever. It also helped paved the way for the rise of the dinosaurs and their descendants. The massed volcanism would have also driven the breakup of Pangaea.
We know this because in the area we now call Siberia, enormous flood basalts have been found from that time. These effusions released huge amounts of CO2 and other gasses into the atmosphere.
Other theories include a large asteroid impact or a nearby supernova exposure. Or, it could have been a combination of several factors.
Such was the change to the global climate that nowhere on Earth appears to have been a safe haven. Many lineages were destroyed never to return including the mighty sea scorpions, trilobites, and many more.
4. Pangaea is the most recent supercontinent we know about
As far as we know, Pangaea is the most recent supercontinent that geologists have been able to piece together. There are thought to have been many others before Pangaea, but geologists are less confident about their reconstructions of these.
This is based, in part, on a very rough rule of thumb of supercontinent formation and breakup over cycles of around 400-500 million years.
Pangaea itself took hundreds of millions of years to come together, and was, itself, the amalgamation of other larger continents. The process of building the massive rock Pacman started around 480 million years ago when a large continent called Laurentia (which includes present-day North America) merged with several other micro-continents to form Euramerica.
We are confident you can work out what part of the modern world that includes.
Euramerica, in turn, then eventually collided with Gondwana, another supercontinent that included Africa, Australia, South America, and the Indian subcontinent. Pangaea lasted for around a hundred million years, before completely breaking up in the Jurassic.
5. You can still see the pieces of the Pangaea puzzle today
We have already discussed some of the tools used to piece together what Pangaea probably looked like above, but there is another, very convincing and easy-to-understand method too. This is the fact that modern continents and their continental shelves, actually fit together like a giant jigsaw (sort of).
If we could drain all the oceans, you would see that all the continents on the planet actually stretch out a bit under the sea. As these parts are normally flooded, we never really see them.
Most continental shelves are very broad and tend to be gently sloping plains covered by relatively shallow water. Water depth over the continental shelves can vary widely but tend to average about 60 meters (200 feet).
By using a range of techniques like sonar, scientists have been able to map these areas in very high resolution over the years. By studying and comparing these areas, it is actually possible to reconstruct their past with high amounts of certainty.
For example, the west coast of Africa and the East coast of the Americas appear to be a pretty good fit. If you compress Mexico (nothing personal) and stack North and South America on top of one another, Morocco to about Gabon will fit snuggly against the west and south coast of the United States.
The east coast of South America and the west coast of Africa will also fit together very nicely. As we know today, this is no coincidence, and the formation of the Atlantic Ocean was the result of these three continents going their separate ways.
This separation occurred, very roughly, 140 million years ago, but it indicates that these three continents were connected at some point in the past.
The very same process of mapping the seafloor in high definition has also revealed some other incredibly important supporting evidence for plate tectonics and, by extension, the ancient supercontinent. Called the mid-ocean ridges, these are enormous "wounds" or "scars" that run, very approximately, along the mid-point between modern continents on the sea floor (with the exception of places like Iceland).
These structures, it has since been discovered, are where oceanic crust is formed as magma spews from the mantle into the deep sea. Much like an open wound on your skin, the liquid hot rock rises from the mantle, cools, and forms new slabs of rock at the surface.
What's more, these ridge systems create crust at differing rates, with those in the Pacific generally more rapid than others like the mid-Atlantic ridge.
Since you can't continuously create new crust without causing the overall size of the crust to expand over time, somewhere along the line rock needs to be returned to the mantle and destroyed.
Oceanic crust is heavier and denser than continental crust and accumulates material from dead ocean organisms and sediment dumping as it nears continental shelves. This adds extra weight to the oceanic crust, causing it to eventually sink below the less dense continental crust.
This is the core idea behind plate tectonics, and the process of creation and destruction creates a kind of conveyor belt that pushes continents around. The ridges themselves actually form shapes suspiciously similar to the continental jigsaw pieces we discussed earlier.
It is highly unlikely this is just a coincidence.
And that ancient supercontinent boffins is your lot for today.
While the mechanics of its formation are still largely theoretical, the idea behind such a large continent as Pangaea is not pure fantasy. The gradual accumulation of corroborating evidence over time has lest most geologists to believe that the world we see today is not as it has always been.
Several core principles in geology, like plate tectonics, can actually be observed in action today, so rewinding the movie of Earth's continental evolution is largely a very safe bet - scientifically speaking."
So we will have a super supercontinent again in the future called Pangaea Proxima. And yet man was no where to be seen there was also extremes difference in climate. As many have said the Earth has been much hotter than it is now by a lot. The suspected driver is volcanic activity led to the release of an immense amount of greenhouse gases, leading to global warming and ocean acidification on a vast scale. Again not mankind. Pangaea lasted for around a hundred million years, before completely breaking up in the Jurassic, so when Pangaea Proxima forms it will last a long time. The rate of change of our Earth is base on the ridge systems create crust at differing rates, with those in the Pacific generally more rapid than others like the mid-Atlantic ridge. Now you know we are all Pangaeaians from our distance past.
Reference: https://interestingengineering.com/pangaea-earth-ancient-supercontinent-extinction
I have lost a lot of faith with the Medical Community and the Governments over the last several years, but there are a few good things that can raise above the corruption and the pushing of drugs a new approach to heal people. The following is from www.gaia.com and written by Hunter Parsons that does not involve any drug or pushing an ineffective so called vaccine that the drug company is not held accountable in any way but they use sound! The use of sound can regrow bone tissue! Here is the story:
"The future of regenerative medicine could be found within sound healing by regrowing bone cells with sound waves.
The use of sound as a healing modality has an ancient tradition all over the world. The ancient Greeks used sound to cure mental disorders; Australian Aborigines reportedly use the didgeridoo to heal; and Tibetan or Himalayan singing bowls were, and still are, used for spiritual healing ceremonies.
Recently, a study showed an hour-long sound bowl meditation reduced anger, fatigue, anxiety, and ...
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"Wormholes, invisibility cloaks, and anti-gravity — it’s not science fiction, it’s just some of the exotic things the U.S. government has been researching.
A massive document dump by the Defense Intelligence Agency shows some of the wild research projects the United States government was, at least, funding through the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program known as AATIP.
And another lesser-known entity called the Advanced Aerospace Weapons System Application Program or AAWSAP
The Defense Intelligence Agency has recently released a large number of documents to different news outlets and individuals who have filed Freedom of Information Act requests.
Of particular interest are some 1,600 pages released to Vice News, which ...
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"Over the past decade, there have been a number of archeological revelations pushing back the timeline of human evolution and our ancient ancestors’ various diasporas. Initially, these discoveries elicit some resistance as archeologists bemoan the daunting prospect of rewriting the history books, though once enough evidence is presented to established institutions, a new chronology becomes accepted.
But this really only pertains to the era of human development that predates civilization — the epochs of our past in which we were merely hunter-gatherers and nomads roaming the savannahs. Try challenging the consensus timeline of human civilization and it’s likely you’ll be met with derision and rigidity.
Conversely, someone of an alternative...
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We all have heard about chaos theory, but if you have not or have forgotten what chaos theory is well here you go from interestingengineering.com:
"Chaos theory deals with dynamic systems, which are highly sensitive to initial conditions, making it almost impossible to track the resulting unpredictable behavior. Chaos theory seeks to find patterns in systems that appear random, such as weather, fluid turbulence, and the stock market.
Since the smallest of changes can lead to vastly different outcomes, the long-term behavior of chaotic systems is difficult to predict despite their inherently deterministic nature.
As Edward Lorenz, who first proposed what became commonly known as the Butterfly Effect, eloquently said, "Chaos: When the present determines the future, but the approximate present does not approximately determine the future.""
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The following is from an article from interestingengineering.com and written by Paul Ratner:
"A new study looks at how accurately AI can diagnose patients. We interview the researcher, who weighs in on AI's role ...