Supervolcano 'megabeds' discovered at bottom of sea point to catastrophic events in Europe every 10,000 to 15,000 years

Nov 15, 2023
1
1
10
Visit site
These events might have had a significant influence on human history. The Neanderthals started to go extinct around 40,000 years ago, and agriculture developed around 8,000 years ago. Not sure about events coinciding with the other dates, but it's possible that cooling from volcanoes spurred the adaptation or replacement of groups of people.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Giovani
Jan 15, 2023
138
7
605
Visit site
Four huge deposits from supervolcano eruptions over the last 40,000 years have been discovered at the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea.

Supervolcano 'megabeds' discovered at bottom of sea point to catastrophic events in Europe every 10,000 to 15,000 years : Read more
There appears to be a plethora of Super-Volcanoes worldwide.
It's not as if humankind knew nothing about this. Now the reality is knocking at our door.
If anyone should wonder if a previous civilization existed prior to what is known, this same situation of every continent possessing a Super-Volcano is capable of covering the surface encompassing a major portion of earth., completely erasing any sign of the previous.
Why does my intuition nudge me in expecting a catastrophe such as this in my lifetime? Humans are ripe for an entirely new paradigm to replace any reality we know of.
 
Jan 28, 2024
1
0
10
Visit site
These events might have had a significant influence on human history. The Neanderthals started to go extinct around 40,000 years ago, and agriculture developed around 8,000 years ago. Not sure about events coinciding with the other dates, but it's possible that cooling from volcanoes spurred the adaptation or replacement of groups of people.
The pole shift from 42000 years ago is what caused the Neanderthals to go extinct, its what we are going through right now, a pole shift.
 
Jan 15, 2023
138
7
605
Visit site
The pole shift from 42000 years ago is what caused the Neanderthals to go extinct, its what we are going through right now, a pole shift.
True, but the Neanderthals were a determinate species. The introduction of humankind produced offspring for thousands of years.
Human genetics trumped the naturally evolved Neanderthal and other species' genomes. It isn't a surprise considering the first Neanderthal was discovered close to a cave and the last inside of a cave.
Our genetic heritage hosts Neanderthal genes from extensive propagation.
We might have the same or similar determination in our genetic makeup. We may have a "shelf life".