Re: Planet X: MAY Coordinates
In Article <9dbsqi$98l$1@zot.isi.edu> Brian Tung wrote:
> It is generally understood that Ipuwer wrote his
> original parchment (now lost, a copy having been
> made much later) around 1800 B.C. If the Exodus
> happened (apparently, there is some recent evidence
> that it did not), then it happened around 1200 B.C.
Exodus and Ipuwer were describing the same event, and you're saying the
Exodus never happened? Humm. Here's some more data, a bit more firm on
dates that when this or that document might have been written, based on
THINGS, not writing, that also point to 3,600 years ago or so as the
last passage.
S.L. Vartanyan, K.A. Arslanov, T.V. Tertychnaya, S.B. Chernov:
Radiocarbon Dating Evidence for Mammoths on Wrangel Island,
Artic-Ocean, Until 2000-BC.
In Radiocarbon, 1995, Vol 37, No. 1, pp 1-6
Radiocarbon dating results of mammoth tusks, teeth and bones
collected on Wrangel Island between 1989 and 1991 reveal a
unique mammoth refugium during the Holocene. We used an
improved chemical procedure to obtain and purify collagen
from bone. Benzene synthesized from the samples was
measured using a liquid scintillation counter. The validity
of our data has been confirmed by the results of our
measurements on two international control sample series
(IAEA and TIRI) and by parallel measurements of Wrangel
Island mammoth remains at other laboratories.
Discovery magazine, April 1999
The heyday of the woolly mammoth was the Pleistocene
Epoch, stretching from 1.8 million years ago to the end
of the last ice age 11,000 years ago. Mammoths thrived
particularly well in Siberia, where dry grasslands once
stretched for hundreds of miles, supporting a vibrant ecosystem
of mammoths, bison, and other jumbo herbivores. .. The
mammoth fossils on Wrangel Island are the youngest that
have ever been found. It was there, apparently, that mammoths
made their last stand. They died out only 3,800 years ago.
Earth in Upheaval, The Ivory Islands
Fossil tusks of the mammoth - an extinct elephant -
were found in northern Siberia and brought southward
to markets at a very early time. Northern Siberia
provided more than half the world's supply of ivory,
many piano keys and many billiard balls being made
from the fossil tusks of mammoths.
In 1797 the body of a mammoth, with flesh, skin, and
hair, was found in northeastern Siberia. The flesh had
the appearance of freshly frozen beef; it was edible, and
wolves and sled dogs fed on it without harm. The ground
must have been frozen ever since the day of their
entombment; had it not been frozen, the bodies of the
mammoths would have putrefied in a single summer,
but they remained unspoiled for some thousands of years.
In some mammoths, when discovered, even the eyeballs
were still preserved.
[All] this shows that the cold became suddenly extreme ..
and knew no relenting afterward. In the stomachs and
between the teeth of the mammoths were found plants
and grasses that do not grow now in northern Siberia ..
[but are] .. now found in southern Siberia. Microscopic
examination of the skin showed red blood corpuscles,
which was proof not only of a sudden death, but that the
death was due to suffocation either by gases or water.