Thursday, October 17, 2013

65 million years ago

 
If Technological Humanoids first came here 65 million years ago?

As an intuitive I can trace technological humans here on Earth I believe presently 65 million years. This is how this works. I think at this point I still have to consider this to be a Theory rather than a Law because I cannot physically prove this to you. However, I'm pretty sure this is what actually happened to us.

Imagine 65 million years ago plus 50 years or so before technological humans came to earth. We lived on Maldek (the asteroid belt planet) and we also lived on Mars (who had it's atmosphere stripped off by the thermonuclear war on Maldek when it became and asteroid belt. Where did humans come from before that. LIkly Venus or outside the Solar System when the sun was cool enough to allow life on Venus. But now Venus is 600 to 900 degrees Fahrenheit so life as we know it on Earth cannot exist there.

So, either we moved from Venus to Mars and Maldek because it got too hot on Venus as the sun got hotter. It could have been many of us moved or a few of us moved and the rest cooked on Venus.

Then eventually there was either a war on Maldek between the various countries of Maldekians or there was a war between Mars and Maldek or all this combined somehow. Eventually, themonuclear bombs tore a hole in the crust of the planet Maldek and the oceans interacted with the magma of the planet and through steam explosions started blowing the planet apart. This could also happen here on earth  if the steam chain reaction started with oceans pouring into the magma. Look what happens when lava hits the ocean in Hawaii for example.

Slowly over days or weeks pieces of the planet blew off into space until people's lungs in some parts of Maldek were blown out of their mouths because of the lack of air pressure. However, some of hte wives and children of the aristocracy of Maldek were rescued by most of the men died because of the war. They were rescued by a Time Traveler from another region of space from their space lifeboats around Maldek and taken to Mars. However, Martians weren't very nice because the thermonuclear and later hydrothermal (water and magma) reactions on Maldek had blown not only Maldek apart it had also blown away most of Mars' atmosphere. So, people were also now dying on Mars at a slower rate than they did on Maldek months or years before. The people who had survived on Mars and the refugees from the now blow up completely Maldek who were on Mars then asked the Galactic Government if they could have earth  to settle because there were no technological humans there beyond scientific researchers because it wasn't safe there because of large dinosaurs. About this time either a chunk of Maldek (asteroid) hit the Gulf of Mexico or was engineered to hit there on Earth and all the largest dinosaurs died over the next few years time from freezing and starvation. Only smaller creatures on land that could hide in caves and crevices to stay warm enough survived. However, in the water some larger dinosaurs did survive like large crocodiles, whales, Sea Elephants, and possibly on land Mastodons (giant elephants with hair survived too.(However, this was 65 million years ago) so it is possible elephant ancestors might have been smaller then and slowly got larger around the equator or something like that. Then humans were allowed to move here because we live on the land and not in the water for the most part and all the largest dinosaurs were now extinct except those who had survived in the oceans and waters of earth.

So, you might ask why didn't human civilization and technology stay intact the last 65 million years?

I think we are seeing why now. As technology through the industrial revolution of the 1800s changed the way societies operate completely they also changed how wars were fought too. So, what was set on it's head was the natural evolution of humans here on earth. So, instead of evolving through brute force, only intelligence and technology began to matter. This is becoming even more extreme now in our society to where one person with enough technology could extinct all the rest. 

This makes human technological civilization top heavy and causes eventually the aristocracy to stop educating the masses. When the masses are not educated they are more likely to rebel. So, more and more fewer and fewer people who control the technology simply wipe out the uneducated masses because they would no longer be necessary to be slaves or workers for the aristocracy and so would become a nuisance to the aristocracy. We are seeing evidence of this already using drones with hellfire missiles already this century. In the future this gets much worse.

Another factor in why technology doesn't stay longer than 25,000 years to 50,000 years in a cycle is Ice ages. The dynamic that creates technology is a neurosis that is caused by people who live near the polar regions. They have to work all the time to survive unlike their easy going brothers and sisters who live near the equator. This "polar neurosis" causes them to create technology which evolves faster and faster at a certain point like now into something like we are seeing now on earth. Then people stop becoming educated (except the aristocracy) and the masses that can still survive start to devolve while the aristocracy continues to evolve in intelligence through diet, exercise and technology.

Eventually however, the amount of people on earth causes an ice age which comes very fast when it finally does like it could in this century or the next or next. This wipes out most civilization except in the equatorial regions and sparks wars of survival between people in far northern and far southern regions  with those who live closer to the equator because those wiped out by the ice age no longer have tillable land. This then creates a cycle where technology eventually is lost and mankind devolves and we return to something like the world was between the time of Moses and around 1500 AD over most of the Earth. Then over the next 10,000 or 20,000 years technology once again is developed through "polar neuroses" and the cycle is repeated.

If this theory is true then how many times has civilization (technological civilization) been created and then died out on earth if it happens every 25,000 to 50,000 years?

I'll try every 50,000 years as an example: 65 million years divided by 50,000 years means that likely human civilization has developed at least 13,000 times already and devolved during ice ages 13,000 times already since the dinosaurs died from the asteroid belt hitting Earth in the Gulf of Mexico.

So, my theory also includes members of our civilizations here on earth who left earth and weren't left to devolve who made it to other planets safely. They are the UFOs that visit us here to visit their more unfortunate relatives who had to stay here for one reason or another during ice ages: 13,000 ice ages.

Why is this important to know about? Because the amount of humans on earth will likely generate another ice age in which civilization will be lost for the 13,001st time within 300 years or so.

So, unless enough of us realize this most of us will devolve once again during the next ice age to basically cave men and cave women in order to survive what comes next.

The question might be: "Can we create a technological society that can survive this next ice age we are presently generating through overpopulation and the burning of fossil fuels?

As heat increases at some point cloud cover will too and when some winter that reaches a critical mass or water currents start to change like in  "The Day After Tomorrow" we will flip quickly (within a few weeks time likely) into an ice age just near the north pole or possibly both poles at once. However, I think because of population densities it would start at the northern polar regions first and spread down towards Mexico and Northern Africa. We had a minor demonstration of this last winter
in Europe  when it was snowing a lot in Northern Africa and even snowing in Rome, Italy with snowboarders boarding down Rome's streets on snow. I think a more extreme version of this eventually will take place because of extreme cloud cover or water currents changing quickly in the ocean. The areas most affected by this would be: North America (all of it), All of Europe, Russia and China, part or all of Japan, Korea etc.

Here is the winter cold wave of early 2012:

Early 2012 European cold wave - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_2012_European_cold_wave
File:Winter in Bucharest February 2012.ogv. View of a street in Bucharest on February 13. Belarus – Early in the day on January 30, subzero temperatures ...

Early 2012 European cold wave

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Early 2012 European cold wave
300px
Extreme minimum temperature 4 to 11 February 2012, computer generated contours, based on preliminary data.
Formed January 27, 2012
Dissipated February 17, 2012
Lowest temperature −39.2 °C (−38.6 °F) (February 2, Kuusamo, Finland)
Damage $660 million (2012 USD)[1]
Fatalities 1,040+[1]
Areas affected Europe and North Africa
The Early 2012 European cold wave was a deadly cold wave that started on January 27, 2012 and brought snow and freezing temperatures to much of the European continent. There were 824+ deaths reported.[1] Particularly low temperatures hit several Eastern and Northern European countries, reaching as low as −39.2 °C (−38.6 °F) in Finland. The heaviest snow was recorded in the Balkan region.

Countries affected

Effects

Eastern, Northern and Western Europe


Land surface temperature anomaly of Europe between 25 January and 1 February 2012

A map of the land temperature anomaly in Europe between 29 January and 4 February 2012.
The northern half of Europe was affected primarily by greater cold and – except for a period of early snow – low precipitation. The snowfall of the third week of January was up to 1 m (3.3 ft) of snow in a few days, particularly affecting Slovakia and Bulgaria. On Sunday, January 22, heavy snowfall in northern Námestovo caused an ice rink to collapse under the weight of the snow.
In Kuusamo, in the hills of eastern Finland, temperatures of −39.2 °C (−38.6 °F) were recorded on February 2, the lowest temperatures in Europe. The village Kvilda in Sumava (Czech Republic) recorded temperatures of −38.1 °C (−36.6 °F) on February 3, the lowest temperatures in Central Europe.
Ukraine was especially affected by the onset of cold weather,[2][3] at the end of January, the temperatures fell below −30 °C (−22 °F), at the time the snow was at least 30 cm (12 in), on February 3, over 100 cm (3.3 ft), and by the end of the first week of February, over 130 cm (4.3 ft) was recorded. The Ukrainian government announced that many of the public safety issues it was encountering were related to alcohol abuse in the context of the dangerously cold weather.
The Baltic states also recorded temperatures down to −30 °C (−22 °F). Moscow announced that, since the beginning of the last week of January, night temperatures ranged down to −25 °C (−13 °F).
The Mediterranean coast of southern France was covered in deep snow by the end of January. Corsica was buried under 40 cm (1.3 ft) of snow, and at times there were as many as 14,000 homes without electricity.
In early February, heavy snow pile-ups hit the Helsinki region. Belgium also was surprised by the snowfall. At the same time, the snow reached the British Isles, causing interruptions at London Heathrow Airport where up to 10 cm (3.9 in) of snow impeded many scheduled flights.
In Germany, the Elbe downstream of Magdeburg became impassable due to ice, as well as the entire Elbe–Havel Canal and parts of the Rhine–Main–Danube Canal. Supplies had to be sent to the island of Spiekeroog via aircraft for the second time in its history, as the ferry service was canceled on February 7, 2012 due to heavy ice conditions in the North Sea. On Lake Constance, the catamaran speed-boat traffic between Friedrichshafen and Konstanz had to be canceled due to the icing over of the port in Konstanz on February 7 until further notice. This port hadn't been frozen to such an extent since the winter of 1962–1963.

Mediterranean Sea, Danube and Balkan

Italy, the Balkans and the Danube were in addition to cold weather also affected by heavy snowfall; Erfrierungsopfer also reported the majority of countries of this area, as well as extensive traffic delays and economic consequences. The cold wave covered the Maghreb in the western Mediterranean, as well as the Aegean, the Turkey and the Levant in the eastern part of the Mediterranean area. On Bologna fell 94 cm (37 in) of snow between 1 and 12 February with a maximum height on the ground of 65 cm (26 in); 190 cm (75 in) fell on Cesena (30m above see level) with maximum height of 120 cm (47 in) and 326 cm (128 in) fell on Urbino where the snow accumulation on the ground reached 2 m (79 in) deep. Even Turkey, Spain and Portugal fell to low temperatures in early February, the temperature sometimes considerably below the freezing point. Snow fell in Mallorca for the first time since 1956, and even in Algiers, Algeria, in southern Tunisia in Gabès. In Italy, there were extensive power outages (up to 120,000 people were without electricity) as well as traffic congestion, and the Army had to intervene for snow removal: in Rome, where snow had fallen before the weekend of February 4–5, it was almost impossible to drive. Until the second week of February reigned throughout northern and central Italy tiefwinterliche conditions, particularly in Marche, in Umbria, the Abruzzi and Emilia-Romagna. In Rome, after the snowfalls of February 11–12, 2,000 passengers had to spend the night in Fiumicino airport.

Europe

In Bosnia and Herzegovina, this year's winter was one of the coldest and snowiest in the last 100 years. The snow depth in the capital Sarajevo reached 111 cm (43.7 inches) and in Mostar 86 cm (34 inches). On the fifth of February in Sarajevo, 5 people died because of cold weather in 3 hours. Snow and low temperatures stayed persistent until the month of March when drought hit the country. In March, not even 1 liter of precipitation fell throughout the whole country. In Sarajevo snow cover stayed until April. The cold wave killed anywhere from 15 to 50 people.

Record snowfall in Sarajevo
View of a street in Bucharest on February 13
  •  Belarus – Early in the day on January 30, subzero temperatures spread rapidly, data accessed by AccuWeather showed.[4] According to meteoinfo.by, on the night of 11 through February 12, temperatures in the Brahin Raion dropped to −34.3 °C (−29.7 °F). According to National Agency BielTA, from January 1, more than 180 people died in domestic fires. Total number of casualties remain unknown.[5]
  •  Bulgaria – Over 1 meter (3.3 feet) of snow fell in the mountainous areas of the country. Heavy snow fell also in many major cities. The snow depth reached as much as 63 cm (24.8 inches) in Vidin, 61 cm (24 inches) in Vratsa and 49 cm (19.3 inches) in the capital Sofia. Temperatures dropped under –20 °C (–4 °F) in many parts of Bulgaria, with a low reading of −30 °C (−22 °F) in Knezha. The wall of the Ivanovo dam in southern Haskovo Province broke, flooding the village of Biser and killing 11 people, as well as inflicting serious infrastructural damage. At least 16 other deaths were reported throughout the country, due to the arctic temperatures.
  •  Croatia – As of February 6, 3 people died,[6] with concerns of many villages being cut off, especially near Vrgorac.
  •  Cyprus – On February 29, snow was reported as falling in the capital, Nicosia.
  •  Denmark – On the morning of February 5, the lowest temperature in Denmark for 25 years was recorded in Odense with -23,1 °C .
  •  France – On February 6, BBC News reported 4 deaths, and 43 regions in France on high alert for 'exceptional' weather conditions. On February 11, the Six Nations Championship game between France and Ireland, was postponed shortly before kick-off, due to the pitch freezing, as temperatures plummeted beneath −10 °C (14 °F).

Piazza del Popolo, Rome under the snowfall
  •  Italy – Rome experienced a rare intense snowfall, and many of Venice's canals have frozen over, while very heavy snowfalls (up to 2m/7 ft in a couple of weeks) occurred in the Apennines.[7] On February 6, the Italian rail network may face legal action, due to many passengers being stranded on trains over the weekend. Temperatures plummeted to −21 °C (−6 °F) on February 7, in the north of the country. At least 54 people have died[8]

Tisza River near Szeged, Hungary
  •  Greece – Many homeless people froze to death and a dam on the Evros river burst due to pressure. Temperatures also plummered to −25 °C (−13 °F) in the northwest city of Florina.
  •  Latvia – The lowest temperature was recorded at the Strenči meteorological station, hitting −34.2 °C (−29.6 °F) on February 5.[9] For several days not a single meteorological station reported a temperature above −20 °C (−4 °F). Because of the severe cold wave, some regions in Latvia experienced a shortage of power supply,[9] an increased number of domestic fires were reported.
  •  Malta – The lowest temperature at grass level was measured at Zebbug. The temperature was that of −2.4 °C (27.7 °F). It was measured on Wednesday, February 8. An air temperature of 4.0 °C (39.2 °F) was also measured during one of a series of hailstorms which occurred during the month.
  •  Netherlands – A cold wave was registered in the Netherlands, with a low of −18.9 °C (−2.0 °F) in De Bilt, the lowest recorded since 1956,[10] and a national low of −22.8 °C (−9.0 °F) in Lelystad, the lowest temperature recorded all over the Netherlands since 1985.[11] A homeless man was frozen to death on February 2,.[12] People have been ice-skating on the canals of Amsterdam.
  •  Poland – Early in the day on January 30, subzero cold spread widely over Belarus, Ukraine, Romania, Bulgaria, Serbia and eastern Poland, data accessed by AccuWeather.com showed.[4] From the January 1, 2012, 103 people froze to death. Fire and Rescue Service reported 360 domestic fires during one night (February 11–12), and almost 12000 fire accidents this year. Reports state 107 people died in flames with 550 more suffer various degrees of burns. Due to carbon monoxide poisoning 24 people died.[13]

Winter of 2012 in south of Bucharest, Romania
  •  Romania – At least 86 people have died.[14] In some areas, the bitter cold was followed by heavy snow. The snow depth in the capital Bucharest reach 60 cm (23.5 inches).[4] On February 11, the Danube was reportedly completely frozen over.

Winter in Volgograd Oblast, Russia

Heavy snowfall in Novi Sad, Serbia.
  •  SerbiaSjenica set −32 °C (−26 °F), early on the morning of February 9. In Serbia at least 50,000 villagers have been trapped by heavy snow and blizzards in mountainous areas.[16] Gas supplies are running low.[17] On February 8, electricity consumption broke a record, standing at 162.67 million kWh, so the government mandated a shutdown of all non-essential industries and decorative lightning.[18] The death toll has risen to 20.[17]
  •  SpainPalma, Majorca registered the most important snow episode[clarification needed] since 1956.[19] In Catalonia – Heavy snowfall and winds of 175 km/h (109 mph) were reported in Portbou as temperatures dropped to −23 °C (−9 °F).
  •  Ukraine – More than 100 homeless people have died as temperatures dropped as low as −35 °C (−31 °F).[16] Gas supplies were running low.[7] The cold led to more than 600 people being treated for frostbite and hypothermia within three days, according to officials. Nearly 24,000 people sought shelter during the same three days, the BBC reported. In western Ukraine, Rivne and Ivano-Frankivsk dipped to −28 °C (−18 °F).[4] Ukrainian health officials stated (on February 16) 151 people had died because of the cold,[20] with alcohol regularly a contributing factor,[20] the highest number in Europe.[2]
  •  United Kingdom – The Met Office issued a severe weather warning as heavy snow fell across much of the country on February 4, disrupting roads and flights.[21] Temperatures fell to −11.8 °C (10.8 °F) in the early hours of February 8,.[22] More heavy snow fell overnight in England on February 9–10. On the night of February 10–11, the temperature in England[specify] fell to −15.6 °C (3.9 °F), the coldest temperatures since Boxing Day in 2010.[23] Northern Ireland was the only place in the UK that wasn't badly affected by the cold wave.

Africa

  •  Algeria – The north of the country awoke to a blanket of snow, 28 of 48 departments of the country have had snow, including Algiers and even parts of Sahara Desert.[24] Snow covered Algerian lower cities at least for several days, meanwhile higher cities like Sétif (1100m amsl) where cover by snow for weeks. Sétif registered up to 70 cm (28 in) of snow,[25][26] some villages like Bousselam registered up to 2.5 m (98 in)[27][28] The average temperature at this particular time of year being 9 °C (48 °F).
As February 9, more than 80 people died because of the cold wave (Forty-four people died during the first week of the cold wave): thirty of them were killed in car accidents caused by icy roads,[29][30] and 14 from asphyxiation due to gas fumes.
The following cities recorded snowfall:

Asia

References

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c "February 2012 Global Catastrophe Recap". Aon Benfield. p. 5. Retrieved March 30, 2012.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Homeless suffer in icy Ukraine as temperatures sink, BBC News (February 10, 2012)
  3. Jump up ^ UN to give $100,000 to help Ukrainians suffering from severe cold Kyiv Post (February 17, 2012)
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e "Europe cold wave turns deadly". AccuWeather. 2012-01-03. Retrieved 2012-02-07.
  5. Jump up ^ "Lowest temperature of the past 50 years in Belarus" (in Polish). Retrieved 2012-02-12.
  6. Jump up ^ "Snijeg prijeti novim kolapsom,hladnoća odnijela treću žrtvu". Dnevnik.hr (in Croatian). February 6, 2012. Retrieved February 6, 2012.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b BBC news – Freezing Europe hit by Russian gas shortage
  8. Jump up ^ "Maltempo: 54 morti dall'inizio di febbraio" (in Italian).
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b Elektroapgādes traucējumi tikai 50 mājsaimniecībām tvnet.lv (Latvian)
  10. Jump up ^ http://www.knmi.nl/klimatologie/lijsten/koudegolven.html
  11. Jump up ^ http://www.nu.nl/binnenland/2732434/laagste-temperatuur-in-27-jaar-gemeten.html
  12. Jump up ^ http://www.metronieuws.nl/nieuws/zwerver-doodgevroren-in-wageningen/IWIlbb!3Y7fGK49dbA8Ak9PAy3wuQ/
  13. Jump up ^ "Cold wave brings more deaths" (in (Polish)). Retrieved 2012-02-12.
  14. Jump up ^ http://www.romanialibera.ro/actualitate/europa/europa-ingheata-590-de-morti-in-urma-valului-de-frig-253337.html
  15. Jump up ^ Cold kills 215 people in Russia since Jan. 1, , Kyiv Post (February 13, 2012)
  16. ^ Jump up to: a b BBC news – Cold weather death toll passes 100 in Ukraine
  17. ^ Jump up to: a b [1]
  18. Jump up ^ [2]
  19. Jump up ^ Diario de Mallorca. "Palma vive la nevada más importante desde 1956 – Diario de Mallorca". Diariodemallorca.es. Retrieved 2012-02-07.
  20. ^ Jump up to: a b Ukraine's death toll from cold spell reaches 151, Kyiv Post (February 16, 2012)
  21. Jump up ^ "Heavy snow falling across much of UK". BBC News (BBC). February 4, 2012. Retrieved February 4, 2012.
  22. Jump up ^ "UK freezes as night-time temperatures fall". BBC. February 8, 2012. Retrieved February 8, 2012.
  23. Jump up ^ "Coldest night of the winter so far". Met Office. Retrieved February 11, 2012.
  24. Jump up ^ World Weather Post Snow Storm – Algeria – 40,000 troops deployed to clear roads, help the sick
  25. Jump up ^ Actualité Chutes de neige historiques en Algérie (French)
  26. Jump up ^ http://lionsclubalgerie.blogspot.com/2012/02/mobilisations-des-lions-et-des-leos.html
  27. Jump up ^ http://www.lesoirdalgerie.com/articles/2012/02/08/print-2-130008.php
  28. Jump up ^ http://www.setif.info/article6234.html
  29. Jump up ^ ANSAmed Weather: Algeria, 80 killed by cold, mayors against gvt
  30. Jump up ^ Le froid et la neige font au moins 80 morts en Algérie (French)
  31. Jump up ^ "Snow to continue in Armenia well into night".
  32. Jump up ^ "Мировые СМИ пишут о небывалых морозах в Азербайджане" (in Russian).
  33. Jump up ^ "Tbilisi Sea freezes for the first time in 50 years" (in (Russian)). Itar-Tass. Retrieved 2012-02-07.

External links

Media related to Early 2012 European cold wave at Wikimedia Commons
This page was last modified on 14 October 2013 at 01:59.

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Early 2012 European cold wave - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


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