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Reason: None provided.

What did they teach you about earth history in class? I remember most of it. Some stuff about a ice age, then it just randomly ended and we came out of the caves and stuff and evolved from the beings who lived in there.

Was just reading this article the other day, I feel its relevant.

https://www.businessinsider.com/neanderthals-humans-belong-to-same-species-could-rewrite-history-evolution-2023-12

The evidence also suggested that human ancestors and Neanderthals probably had children together when they cohabitated about 50,000 years ago.

https://www.history.com/news/ice-age-human-survival

The most recent ice age peaked between 24,000 and 21,000 years ago, when vast ice sheets covered North America and northern Europe, and mountain ranges like Africa's Mt. Kilimanjaro and South America's Andes were encased in glaciers.

At that point, our Homo sapiens ancestors had migrated from the warm African heartland into northern European and Eurasian latitudes severely impacted by the sinking temperatures. Armed with big, creative brains and sophisticated tools, though, these early modern humans—nearly identical to ourselves physically—not only survived but thrived in their harsh surroundings.

Anyway, thats that. I do find the glacier stuff really neat, I grew up in a area rich in glacier resources, and alot of indian artifacts. I still wonder why they are so many literally scattered across a huge area. You cant dig up a hole in the ohio valley without finding a arrowhead or two. My dad always told me it was because there were millions of indians that lived in that area over thousands of years. I always wondered if some kind of massive flood or something happened at some point.

But if you dig deeper, there is alot more to it. I really considered trying to become a geologist, but I figured there wouldnt be much money in it and programming interested me more than rocks did.

https://www.amnh.org/explore/ology/earth/ask-a-scientist-about-our-environment/how-did-the-ice-age-end

Scientists call this ice age the Pleistocene Ice Age. It has been going on since about 2.5 million years ago (and some think that it's actually part of an even longer ice age that started as many as 40 million years ago).

We are probably living in an ice age right now! But Earth's climate doesn't stay cold during the entire ice age.

The curious thing about ice ages is that the temperature of Earth's atmosphere doesn't stay cold the entire time. Instead, the climate flip-flops between what scientists call "glacial periods" and "interglacial periods."

Glacial periods last tens of thousands of years. Temperatures are much colder, and ice covers more of the planet.

On the other hand, interglacial periods last only a few thousand years and the climate conditions are similar to those on Earth today. We are in an interglacial period right now. It began at the end of the last glacial period, about 10,000 years ago.

I find it reallllllllllllllllllllllll strange, that they dont teach us this in school.

Just stupid conspiracies?

If the powers that be knew that the end of civilization was coming, would they tell us? Fuck no, these are some of these greediest pieces of shit and god or whatever lays on the other side will judge them accordingly. I have faith IN THAT.

They would let us work up until the very last day they could deny it. Why? Because they enjoy living like gods with unlimited money thats why and that only works if everyone else is willing to slave away for nothing for them.

And someone is no doubt going to say, that how do they know this happened? Ice cores, bla bla bla. Not just ice cores. But something theyve been doing since the 1800's.

Driving huge steel hollow rods into the sea floor and etracting cores from that. What they found is proably the closest thing your gonna get to the truth. If you want to think its fake, thats on you.

https://serc.carleton.edu/dig_blueprints/units/dead_oceans.html

https://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/climate-change/changing-ocean/evidence-sediment-cores

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:PS1920-1_0-750_sediment-core_hg.jpg

(if i remember correctly, this is one large core broken up into segements. See the grey areas, I think they are fossilized remains? The dirt areas are when nothing is really living in the ocean, see the repeating cycles?) Had it backwards, Light-colored sediments = Lots of shells, Dark-colored sediments = Few shells

So whats easier to believe, that they are faking all this, or covering it up. Its one of the two. <shrugs>

122 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

What did they teach you about earth history in class? I remember most of it. Some stuff about a ice age, then it just randomly ended and we came out of the caves and stuff and evolved from the beings who lived in there.

Was just reading this article the other day, I feel its relevant.

https://www.businessinsider.com/neanderthals-humans-belong-to-same-species-could-rewrite-history-evolution-2023-12

The evidence also suggested that human ancestors and Neanderthals probably had children together when they cohabitated about 50,000 years ago.

https://www.history.com/news/ice-age-human-survival

The most recent ice age peaked between 24,000 and 21,000 years ago, when vast ice sheets covered North America and northern Europe, and mountain ranges like Africa's Mt. Kilimanjaro and South America's Andes were encased in glaciers.

At that point, our Homo sapiens ancestors had migrated from the warm African heartland into northern European and Eurasian latitudes severely impacted by the sinking temperatures. Armed with big, creative brains and sophisticated tools, though, these early modern humans—nearly identical to ourselves physically—not only survived but thrived in their harsh surroundings.

Anyway, thats that. I do find the glacier stuff really neat, I grew up in a area rich in glacier resources, and alot of indian artifacts. I still wonder why they are so many literally scattered across a huge area. You cant dig up a hole in the ohio valley without finding a arrowhead or two. My dad always told me it was because there were millions of indians that lived in that area over thousands of years. I always wondered if some kind of massive flood or something happened at some point.

But if you dig deeper, there is alot more to it. I really considered trying to become a geologist, but I figured there wouldnt be much money in it and programming interested me more than rocks did.

https://www.amnh.org/explore/ology/earth/ask-a-scientist-about-our-environment/how-did-the-ice-age-end

Scientists call this ice age the Pleistocene Ice Age. It has been going on since about 2.5 million years ago (and some think that it's actually part of an even longer ice age that started as many as 40 million years ago).

We are probably living in an ice age right now! But Earth's climate doesn't stay cold during the entire ice age.

The curious thing about ice ages is that the temperature of Earth's atmosphere doesn't stay cold the entire time. Instead, the climate flip-flops between what scientists call "glacial periods" and "interglacial periods."

Glacial periods last tens of thousands of years. Temperatures are much colder, and ice covers more of the planet.

On the other hand, interglacial periods last only a few thousand years and the climate conditions are similar to those on Earth today. We are in an interglacial period right now. It began at the end of the last glacial period, about 10,000 years ago.

I find it reallllllllllllllllllllllll strange, that they dont teach us this in school.

Just stupid conspiracies?

If the powers that be knew that the end of civilization was coming, would they tell us? Fuck no, these are some of these greediest pieces of shit and god or whatever lays on the other side will judge them accordingly. I have faith IN THAT.

They would let us work up until the very last day they could deny it. Why? Because they enjoy living like gods with unlimited money thats why and that only works if everyone else is willing to slave away for nothing for them.

And someone is no doubt going to say, that how do they know this happened? Ice cores, bla bla bla. Not just ice cores. But something theyve been doing since the 1800's.

Driving huge steel hollow rods into the sea floor and etracting cores from that. What they found is proably the closest thing your gonna get to the truth. If you want to think its fake, thats on you.

https://serc.carleton.edu/dig_blueprints/units/dead_oceans.html

https://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/climate-change/changing-ocean/evidence-sediment-cores

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:PS1920-1_0-750_sediment-core_hg.jpg

(if i remember correctly, this is one large core broken up into segements. See the grey areas, I think they are fossilized remains? The dirt areas are when nothing is really living in the ocean, see the repeating cycles?)

So whats easier to believe, that they are faking all this, or covering it up. Its one of the two. <shrugs>

122 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

What did they teach you about earth history in class? I remember most of it. Some stuff about a ice age, then it just randomly ended and we came out of the caves and stuff and evolved from the beings who lived in there.

Was just reading this article the other day, I feel its relevant.

https://www.businessinsider.com/neanderthals-humans-belong-to-same-species-could-rewrite-history-evolution-2023-12

The evidence also suggested that human ancestors and Neanderthals probably had children together when they cohabitated about 50,000 years ago.

https://www.history.com/news/ice-age-human-survival

The most recent ice age peaked between 24,000 and 21,000 years ago, when vast ice sheets covered North America and northern Europe, and mountain ranges like Africa's Mt. Kilimanjaro and South America's Andes were encased in glaciers.

At that point, our Homo sapiens ancestors had migrated from the warm African heartland into northern European and Eurasian latitudes severely impacted by the sinking temperatures. Armed with big, creative brains and sophisticated tools, though, these early modern humans—nearly identical to ourselves physically—not only survived but thrived in their harsh surroundings.

Anyway, thats that. I do find the glacier stuff really neat, I grew up in a area rich in glacier resources, and alot of indian artifacts. I still wonder why they are so many literally scattered across a huge area. You cant dig up a hole in the ohio valley without finding a arrowhead or two. My dad always told me it was because there were millions of indians that lived in that area over thousands of years. I always wondered if some kind of massive flood or something happened at some point.

But if you dig deeper, there is alot more to it. I really considered trying to become a geologist, but I figured there wouldnt be much money in it and programming interested me more than rocks did.

https://www.amnh.org/explore/ology/earth/ask-a-scientist-about-our-environment/how-did-the-ice-age-end

Scientists call this ice age the Pleistocene Ice Age. It has been going on since about 2.5 million years ago (and some think that it's actually part of an even longer ice age that started as many as 40 million years ago).

We are probably living in an ice age right now! But Earth's climate doesn't stay cold during the entire ice age.

The curious thing about ice ages is that the temperature of Earth's atmosphere doesn't stay cold the entire time. Instead, the climate flip-flops between what scientists call "glacial periods" and "interglacial periods."

Glacial periods last tens of thousands of years. Temperatures are much colder, and ice covers more of the planet.

On the other hand, interglacial periods last only a few thousand years and the climate conditions are similar to those on Earth today. We are in an interglacial period right now. It began at the end of the last glacial period, about 10,000 years ago.

I find it reallllllllllllllllllllllll strange, that they dont teach us this in school.

Just stupid conspiracies?

If the powers that be knew that the end of civilization was coming, would they tell us? Fuck no, these are some of these greediest pieces of shit and god or whatever lays on the other side will judge them accordingly. I have faith IN THAT.

They would let us work up until the very last day they could deny it. Why? Because they enjoy living like gods with unlimited money thats why and that only works if everyone else is willing to slave away for nothing for them.

And someone is no doubt going to say, that how do they know this happened? Ice cores, bla bla bla. Not just ice cores. But something theyve been doing since the 1800's.

Driving huge steel hollow rods into the sea floor and etracting cores from that. What they found is proably the closest thing your gonna get to the truth. If you want to think its fake, thats on you.

https://serc.carleton.edu/dig_blueprints/units/dead_oceans.html

https://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/climate-change/changing-ocean/evidence-sediment-cores

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:PS1920-1_0-750_sediment-core_hg.jpg

So whats easier to believe, that they are faking all this, or covering it up. Its one of the two. <shrugs>

122 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

What did they teach you about earth history in class? I remember most of it. Some stuff about a ice age, then it just randomly ended and we came out of the caves and stuff and evolved from the beings who lived in there.

Was just reading this article the other day, I feel its relevant.

https://www.businessinsider.com/neanderthals-humans-belong-to-same-species-could-rewrite-history-evolution-2023-12

The evidence also suggested that human ancestors and Neanderthals probably had children together when they cohabitated about 50,000 years ago.

https://www.history.com/news/ice-age-human-survival

The most recent ice age peaked between 24,000 and 21,000 years ago, when vast ice sheets covered North America and northern Europe, and mountain ranges like Africa's Mt. Kilimanjaro and South America's Andes were encased in glaciers.

At that point, our Homo sapiens ancestors had migrated from the warm African heartland into northern European and Eurasian latitudes severely impacted by the sinking temperatures. Armed with big, creative brains and sophisticated tools, though, these early modern humans—nearly identical to ourselves physically—not only survived but thrived in their harsh surroundings.

Anyway, thats that. I do find the glacier stuff really neat, I grew up in a area rich in glacier resources, and alot of indian artifacts. I still wonder why they are so many literally scattered across a huge area. You cant dig up a hole in the ohio valley without finding a arrowhead or two. My dad always told me it was because there were millions of indians that lived in that area over thousands of years. I always wondered if some kind of massive flood or something happened at some point.

But if you dig deeper, there is alot more to it. I really considered trying to become a geologist, but I figured there wouldnt be much money in it and programming interested me more than rocks did.

https://www.amnh.org/explore/ology/earth/ask-a-scientist-about-our-environment/how-did-the-ice-age-end

Scientists call this ice age the Pleistocene Ice Age. It has been going on since about 2.5 million years ago (and some think that it's actually part of an even longer ice age that started as many as 40 million years ago).

We are probably living in an ice age right now! But Earth's climate doesn't stay cold during the entire ice age.

The curious thing about ice ages is that the temperature of Earth's atmosphere doesn't stay cold the entire time. Instead, the climate flip-flops between what scientists call "glacial periods" and "interglacial periods."

Glacial periods last tens of thousands of years. Temperatures are much colder, and ice covers more of the planet.

On the other hand, interglacial periods last only a few thousand years and the climate conditions are similar to those on Earth today. We are in an interglacial period right now. It began at the end of the last glacial period, about 10,000 years ago.

I find it reallllllllllllllllllllllll strange, that they dont teach us this in school.

Just stupid conspiracies?

If the powers that be knew that the end of civilization was coming, would they tell us? Fuck no, these are some of these greediest pieces of shit and god or whatever lays on the other side will judge them accordingly. I have faith IN THAT.

They would let us work up until the very last day they could deny it. Why? Because they enjoy living like gods with unlimited money thats why and that only works if everyone else is willing to slave away for nothing for them.

122 days ago
1 score
Reason: Original

What did they teach you about earth history in class? I remember most of it. Some stuff about a ice age, then it just randomly ended and we came out of the caves and stuff and evolved from the beings who lived in there.

Was just reading this article the other day, I feel its relevant.

https://www.businessinsider.com/neanderthals-humans-belong-to-same-species-could-rewrite-history-evolution-2023-12

The evidence also suggested that human ancestors and Neanderthals probably had children together when they cohabitated about 50,000 years ago.

https://www.history.com/news/ice-age-human-survival

The most recent ice age peaked between 24,000 and 21,000 years ago, when vast ice sheets covered North America and northern Europe, and mountain ranges like Africa's Mt. Kilimanjaro and South America's Andes were encased in glaciers.

At that point, our Homo sapiens ancestors had migrated from the warm African heartland into northern European and Eurasian latitudes severely impacted by the sinking temperatures. Armed with big, creative brains and sophisticated tools, though, these early modern humans—nearly identical to ourselves physically—not only survived but thrived in their harsh surroundings.

Anyway, thats that. I do find the glacier stuff really neat, I grew up in a area rich in glacier resources, and alot of indian artifacts. I still wonder why they are so many literally scattered across a huge area. You cant dig up a hole in the ohio valley without finding a arrowhead or two. My dad always told me it was because there were millions of indians that lived in that area over thousands of years. I always wondered if some kind of massive flood or something happened at some point.

But if you dig deeper, there is alot more to it. I really considered trying to become a geologist, but I figured there wouldnt be much money in it and programming interested me more than rocks did.

https://www.amnh.org/explore/ology/earth/ask-a-scientist-about-our-environment/how-did-the-ice-age-end

Scientists call this ice age the Pleistocene Ice Age. It has been going on since about 2.5 million years ago (and some think that it's actually part of an even longer ice age that started as many as 40 million years ago).

We are probably living in an ice age right now! But Earth's climate doesn't stay cold during the entire ice age.

The curious thing about ice ages is that the temperature of Earth's atmosphere doesn't stay cold the entire time. Instead, the climate flip-flops between what scientists call "glacial periods" and "interglacial periods."

Glacial periods last tens of thousands of years. Temperatures are much colder, and ice covers more of the planet.

On the other hand, interglacial periods last only a few thousand years and the climate conditions are similar to those on Earth today. We are in an interglacial period right now. It began at the end of the last glacial period, about 10,000 years ago.

I find it reallllllllllllllllllllllll strange, that they dont teach us this in school.

Just stupid conspiracies?

122 days ago
1 score