Vey interesting...
Have you also seen this guy's research?
"Glaciologist Lonnie Thompson worries that he may have
found clues that show history repeating itself, and if
he is right, the result could have important
implications to modern society.
Evidence shows that around 5,200 years ago, solar
output first dropped precipitously and then surged
over a short period. It is this huge solar energy
oscillation that Thompson believes may have triggered
the climate change he sees in all those records.
Aside from the novelty of the find, Thompson is
focusing on its potential implications: The plant had
to have remained covered and protected for most of
that time, which means that the ice cap most likely
has not deteriorated to its current size for any
length of time in more than 50,000 years."
http://researchnews.osu.edu/archive/quelplant.htm
http://researchnews.osu.edu/archive/5200event.htm
> Date: Sun, 13 Mar 2005 01:13:09 -0000
> From: "woulph" <woulph@...>
> Subject: The ice age
>
>
> For something interesting, at least to me. Check out
> Scientific
> American's article on "8,000 years of global
> warming." It says that
> we would have entered a new ice age about 5,000
> years ago except for
> the warming activity caused by human agriculture.
> Then the world
> climate stayed relitively stable until recently.
> Global warming is
> heating up due to fossil fuel use and we are about
> to experience a
> global heat pulse. So the Long Count pretty much
> exactly covers the
> the time form when we prevented the onset of the
> last ice age to now
> when we are in for another climate shift.
>
>
>
>
>
>
________________________________________________________________________
>
________________________________________________________________________
>
>
> David Icke Website:
> http://www.davidicke.com
>
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