Загрузка...

Gigantic Meltwater Floods Poured Down the Mississippi

Randall Carlson reconstructs the hydrology of the North American meltdown in terms that make the scale of the event viscerally clear. Throughout the Ice Age, seasonal melting was already producing water volumes far exceeding anything in the modern Mississippi system. When the great meltdown began in earnest, that volume multiplied dramatically.

The Mississippi was not acting alone. The Minnesota River, the Ohio River, and the Missouri River were all simultaneously carrying massively augmented meltwater flows - glacial outbursts and seasonal discharge on a scale that has no modern equivalent - and feeding all of it into the Mississippi. The river was moving an enormous sediment load southward under that volume of water, and when it reached the Gulf of Mexico it encountered a standing body of water. The energy that had been carrying sediment in suspension suddenly dissipated, and the sediment dropped. The delta began to build.

What the diverse environmental indicators preserved in that sediment record show is the speed of what followed. Earth's climate did not gradually drift toward modern conditions over tens of thousands of years. Randall cites evidence suggesting the transition from Ice Age conditions to something approximating the modern climate occurred in less than a millennium - a geological instant that compressed an enormous climatic shift into a timeframe that human populations alive at the time would have experienced within a handful of generations.

Join Randall for his upcoming Finger Lakes Tour, Aug 30 - Sep 5, 2026: https://randallfingerlakestour.manus.space/

Видео Gigantic Meltwater Floods Poured Down the Mississippi канала The Randall Carlson
Яндекс.Метрика
Все заметки Новая заметка Страницу в заметки
Страницу в закладки Мои закладки
На информационно-развлекательном портале SALDA.WS применяются cookie-файлы. Нажимая кнопку Принять, вы подтверждаете свое согласие на их использование.
О CookiesНапомнить позжеПринять