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646,771 Views • Aug 27, 2023 • Click to toggle off description
Graham Hancock about the Younger Dryas Impact Theory.. #ancient #1897 #history



Music: Else - Paris
Clip taken from JRE #1897
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Views : 646,771
Genre: Science & Technology
License: Standard YouTube License
Uploaded At Aug 27, 2023 ^^


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RYD date created : 2024-01-16T20:28:09.740999Z
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1,062 Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@mezsmith

1 year ago

Mammoths were found in siberia with there legs snapped and food in there stomach wich didn't have time to digest and the mammoths were frozen so quick they say you could eat the meat the now
So something extraordinary happened in younger dryas. Amazing

108 |

@albertreyes5298

1 year ago

Do not forget the water under the ground. More than 2,000,000. cubic mile of fresh water is stored under the ground.

37 |

@infidelhedningsson3532

1 year ago

In Sweden there was a large inland sea that just disappeared and even today you can see the high coastline which is about two hundred meters above today's sea level, it was perhaps the collapse that started the flood

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@First_And_Second

1 year ago

When so many ancient cultures (ancient to us) share these legends about a cataclysmic flood that wiped out what came before (a time that was considered ancient to THEM) that simply cannot be discounted.

I believe that the civilizations that were ancient to us crawled out of the subsequent wreck with tiny remnants of that older time and started the painstaking ordeal of starting over again, with ensuing legends of that event warning us that something similar could just as easily happen again.

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@daslepistes

1 year ago

This is not a theory, this is a hypothesis. Theories have multiple evidence that back them up and are testeble. Theories that have yet to obtain enough evidence to be taken seriously is called hypothesis.

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@Zaint

1 year ago

Hancock studied sociology at Durham University before working as a journalist, writing for a number of British newspapers and magazines. His writings have neither undergone scholarly peer review nor been published in academic journals.

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@russellwillmoth9734

1 year ago

As always half truth.

The Younger Dryas impact hypothesis suggests that a comet or meteor impact event triggered the Younger Dryas cooling period about 12,800 years ago. This hypothesis posits that an airburst or impact event set off wildfires, led to a reduction in sunlight reaching the Earth’s surface, and caused a rapid return to glacial conditions in the Northern Hemisphere. This period lasted for about 1,200 years and is characterized by a swift drop in temperatures, changes in precipitation patterns, and advances of glaciers.

However, this hypothesis is a subject of considerable debate within the scientific community. While some evidence, such as the presence of nano-diamonds, soot, and other potential impact markers, has been presented in support of this theory, many researchers question the data and its interpretation. The exact cause of the Younger Dryas cooling event remains a topic of research, with other explanations including changes in ocean circulation patterns due to freshwater influx into the North Atlantic, among others.

14 |

@Morgan75015

1 year ago

The alternative theory suggests a dramatic flip in the Earth's magnetic poles, happening roughly every 12,000 years, which leads to severe changes on the planet's surface.

37 |

@Arka_Das

1 year ago

or may be a big (not huge) flood happened somewhere sometime in the past, and as the human kind migrated to other parts of the earth, the carried the story with them & made different versions of that story, which can be found in many ancient books.

2 |

@ryankenealy4837

1 year ago

It’s scary to think an impact event of that magnitude happened so recently. We used to think events on this scale were extremely rare. It seems now they’re gathering evidence suggesting that Tunguska sized events may happen once or twice a century on average. Younger Dryas sized events could be once or twice every 10,000 years or so.

27 |

@sotl97

1 year ago

There is a theory that a very large comet passed close to the earth, traveling opposit the earths spin. The pull from the comet slowed the earths spin for a period long enough to interfere with the centrifugal force, causing the crust of the earth to collaps inward. As it did massive volumes of water inside the earth were pushed out causing hydrogents and fracturs that gussed water, causing massive and widpread flooding.
I like the melting of the ice caps due to meteroite bombardement also sounds interesting.

9 |

@Druncan.Tusslle

1 year ago

My thoughts are that the Siberian permafrost layer is clearly the melt water that rushed across the land burying the mammoth's and the vegetation underneath it. May have been another fragment closer to the area.

1 |

@zedmeinhardt3404

1 year ago

When you say "more than 100 mainstream scientists"
Is that of the approximate 8.8 million? 😂

27 |

@2ichie

1 year ago

The biggest controversy of this clip is the way he pronounced the word controversy.

2 |

@marketsmoto3180

1 year ago

what you have to understand in order to truly understand how mindblowing this is, is that the chunks of ice sent up and across earth from the impact were NOT from the actual spot of impact but rather 100s of miles away at the EDGE of the ice sheet where the shockwave traveled all teh way to

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@mlittlitt

1 year ago

I think the importance of Graham Hancok is that he brings scientific theories to the public. He may not always be accurate, but you can always study these theories further. I have never heard of this theory but i have wondered how the great flood happened.

8 |

@reverendfry6088

1 year ago

I have a similar, but different hypothesis. Instead of a comet, a magnetosphere compression event caused an arc discharge that carved the Grand Canyon and blew apart the Laurentide Ice sheet.

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@josephmagni5520

1 year ago

It’s a theory for a reason. There is a book that details everything that happened and why. If only we could ask Noah directly…

96 |

@footrot17

1 year ago

We are flying through the disintegrated commit right now. (November ) it's called the Torrid meteor zone

1 |

@detroitfan8908

1 year ago

He is the best person to speak about our humanity past n probably our future

33 |

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