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Craig Stone

@nobulart19,034 subscribers

Exploring the Great Reset. Leave no stone unturned. “Everything flows, and nothing abides; everything gives way, and nothing stays fixed.” – Heraclitus

Shorts

A quick CFD test visualizes the flow geometry which might have contributed to these features.

A quick CFD test visualizes the flow geometry which might have contributed to these features.

27,651 Aufrufe

Tornadoes and Plasma Filaments. The plasma video is slowed down to one tenth of its original speed. Video sources: [1] Connor Croff [2] [3] JacobW The Thunderbolts Project

Tornadoes and Plasma Filaments. The plasma video is slowed down to one tenth of its original speed. Video sources: [1] Connor Croff [2] [3] JacobW The Thunderbolts Project

77,699 Aufrufe

ECDO delivers again. The return from State 2 to State 1 over Europe provides an explanation for the Jura erratic boulders. The Adriatic Sea has nowhere to go but directly over the Alps.

ECDO delivers again. The return from State 2 to State 1 over Europe provides an explanation for the Jura erratic boulders. The Adriatic Sea has nowhere to go but directly over the Alps.

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Building on the previous paper, in this study we compare a continuous “smooth return” S2>S1 model with an event-driven one, where long periods of relative calm are punctuated by short, intense episodes of global reorganisation. Both models cover the same time window. Neither uses archaeological data in its construction. When compared against where early humans and early civilizations actually appear and persist, the difference is statistically robust. The smooth model behaves like background noise. The event-driven model lines up in time and space far better than chance allows, even after aggressive temporal and spatial randomization tests. Statistically, the event-driven model lines up with where and when early civilizations appear far better than a smooth, continuous model, even after we randomize both timing and location to test what could arise by chance. The event timeline itself was built independently from well-known late-glacial disruptions - such as Heinrich events, meltwater pulses, and abrupt deglacial transitions - rather than from any archaeological data. Nothing here claims that specific events caused specific cultures. It does suggest that history may not unfold on a smooth clock. Human societies seem to flourish during recovery phases between disruptions, not during the disruptions themselves. The animation contrasts the two return models. Draft paper : Source & Results : (coming soon)

Building on the previous paper, in this study we compare a continuous “smooth return” S2>S1 model with an event-driven one, where long periods of relative calm are punctuated by short, intense episodes of global reorganisation. Both models cover the same time window. Neither uses archaeological data in its construction. When compared against where early humans and early civilizations actually appear and persist, the difference is statistically robust. The smooth model behaves like background noise. The event-driven model lines up in time and space far better than chance allows, even after aggressive temporal and spatial randomization tests. Statistically, the event-driven model lines up with where and when early civilizations appear far better than a smooth, continuous model, even after we randomize both timing and location to test what could arise by chance. The event timeline itself was built independently from well-known late-glacial disruptions - such as Heinrich events, meltwater pulses, and abrupt deglacial transitions - rather than from any archaeological data. Nothing here claims that specific events caused specific cultures. It does suggest that history may not unfold on a smooth clock. Human societies seem to flourish during recovery phases between disruptions, not during the disruptions themselves. The animation contrasts the two return models. Draft paper : Source & Results : (coming soon)

10,899 Aufrufe

[1] North America: ECDO-derived prediction for S2>S1 revisualized using the ETOPO 2022 elevation map. [2] The line of flow channels running NW-SE appear to me to have been breached simultaneously. [3] How could separate ice-dam breaches at different times have produced such consistent channel erosion depths across this >2000km range?

[1] North America: ECDO-derived prediction for S2>S1 revisualized using the ETOPO 2022 elevation map. [2] The line of flow channels running NW-SE appear to me to have been breached simultaneously. [3] How could separate ice-dam breaches at different times have produced such consistent channel erosion depths across this >2000km range?

22,609 Aufrufe

Thunderbolts of the gods (baby ones)

Thunderbolts of the gods (baby ones)

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Videos

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The Black Sea & Eastern Mediterranean CFD-V1. State 1 to State 2 [1] over a nine-hour period (plus one hour of settling time). During the initial acceleration northwards, the water retreats to the south. Shortly after we move over the geographic north pole, the deceleration sets in, and centrifugal forcing is reversed by ±180° - the departed water returns, inundating much of Ukraine - home to considerable coal, gas, and marine sedimentary deposits. Orange markers are marine fossils. Blue/Pink markers are salt deposits. The water levels during the second phase of this simulation are lower than would be expected in reality. More than 50% of the fluid volume is lost over the Sahara to the south and leaves the simulation domain. Some of this volume would have returned during the deceleration, but is not accounted for here (this is therefore likely a conservative outcome for this scenario). A further >45% is lost to the north, leaving <5% of the original simulation domain volume. Depth, velocity, precursor- and primary-flows are visualised as follows: Depth: greyscale shading of the fluid volume. Whiter is deeper. Velocity: blue-white-red graded shading of the particle system. Precursor (thin) Flows: leading the main volume may be seen as little 'sparkles' at the head of the inundation. These provide clues as to incursion potential. Primary (heavy) Flows: white particle flows which provide a sense of volume distribution in the simulation. Pooling: Dark grey areas on land indicate pooled water. Please note that this is a physically informed visualisation of the primary (acceleration) and secondary (centrifugal) forcings only. Lunar tidal forcing is not accounted for, as it is temporally unpredictable, and of negligible effect by comparison to those under consideration. Possible overflows from the Arctic and North Sea are not modelled. Presented in 4K resolution with DEM (GEBCO bathymetry) and Google Satellite imagery. This is not a predictive safety indicator. It is a passable, evidence-supported approximation of flow direction and extent for the theorised rotation. I may iterate this solution one more time (each taking approximately a week) to improve the detail, but the agreement with existing geological, archaeological, and cultural accounts seems good at this point. [1]

Craig Stone

69,416 Aufrufe • vor 6 Monaten

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When several metronomes are placed on a common movable surface, each begins with its own rhythm. There is no coordinating signal, no external clock, and no instruction for order. Yet their motion converges. The oscillators settle into a shared rhythm that none of them possessed individually. This behavior is not an anomaly but an expression of a general principle: weakly coupled oscillatory systems tend toward phase organization. The phenomenon is known as phase locking, and it appears wherever interacting cyclic processes are allowed to exchange even minimal influence. Its mathematical description was formalized by Kuramoto in the context of chemical oscillations, but the underlying idea is far older: collective order can arise without centralized control. What matters in such systems is not perfect synchrony. More commonly, the system settles into a state of partial synchronization, in which the components maintain a stable phase offset rather than coinciding exactly. The oscillators are neither independent nor identical. They are locked, but imperfectly so. Crucially, such phase-locked states are often metastable. They represent preferred configurations of the system, yet they are separated from large excursions by a finite stability barrier. As long as fluctuations remain small, the system remains confined near its equilibrium phase. But random perturbations, accumulating over time, may eventually push it beyond that barrier. When this occurs, the loss of phase stability is abrupt. The system does not drift gradually into failure; it escapes. This mode of failure is probabilistic rather than deterministic. It is governed by the statistics of noise rather than by intrinsic periodicity. In physical terms, it corresponds to Kramers escape: the thermally or stochastically activated crossing of a potential barrier. Waiting times are irregular, clustering is common, and long intervals of apparent calm coexist with sudden bursts of activity. The relevance of this framework becomes apparent when one turns to the geomagnetic field. [1/3]

Craig Stone

15,054 Aufrufe • vor 4 Monaten

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North America. ECDO oscillation cycle visualization using model V4.[0] Camera-orientation locked to the objective. Considerable inland water masses and some of the most widespread and visible mesoscale flow morphology of any landmass. The Navajo flood myth seems to recount multiple consecutive events.[1] The Roraima pivot is visible lower right.[2] Whale bones in Michigan.[3] Mega current ripples in Nebraska.[4] Flash frozen mammoths in Alaska.[5] suggest that things get pretty wet.[6] "The first world, where Navajos originated, was inhabited by Insect People of twelve types. For their sins of adultery and constant quarreling, the gods expelled them by sending a wall of water from all directions. The Insect People flew up into the second world, guided through a hole in the sky by a cliff swallow. The second world was a barren world inhabited by Swallow People. They decided to stay anyway, but after 24 days, one of the Insect People made love to the wife of the Swallow People's chief. They were expelled to the third world; the white face of the wind told them of an opening. The third world was a barren world of Grasshopper People. Again, the Insect People were expelled for philandering after 24 days. The red face of the wind guided them to the hole to the fourth world. This world was inhabited by animals and Pueblos, with whom the Insect People coexisted peacefully. The gods made people in human form from ears of corn, different colors of corn becoming different tribes. The Insect People intermarried with them, and their descendants eventually looked fully human. In time, the men and women argued and decided to live apart. But both groups engaged in unnatural sex acts, and eventually the women were starving, so they got back together. The gods were displeased by their sins, though, and sent a wall of water upon them. The people noticed animals running and sent cicadas to investigate. They escaped the floodwaters by climbing into a fast-growing reed. Cicada dug an entrance into the fifth world, which was inhabited by grebes. The grebes said that people could have that world if they could survive plunging arrows into their heart. The cicadas met this challenge (they bear the scars on their sides still), and people live in the fifth world today." [0] [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]

Craig Stone

24,000 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

nobulart's profile picture

This paper is describing something which sounds remarkably similar to an ECDO state 2 to state 1 rotation a half a billion years ago. Excerpts from Evidence for a Large-Scale Reorganization of Early Cambrian Continental Masses by Inertial Interchange True Polar Wander, Kirschvink et al. (1997): "..at least two tectonic plates, involving more than two-thirds of Earth's continental lithosphere, were involved in a rapid rotation of ~90° relative to the spin axis. We speculate that the entire lithosphere may have been involved in this rotation. // The new ages, along with paleomagnetic data, indicate that continents moved at rapid rates that are difficult to reconcile with our present understanding of mantle dynamics. // The pole for this sequence is >80° away from the Vendian-Early Cambrian poles, implying that Australia underwent a large rotation while remaining near the equator sometime between Tommotian and Late Cambrian time. // Australia rotated counterclockwise during this time. // Antarctica, India, Africa, South America, and perhaps parts of East Asia also rotated with Australia. // True polar wander (TPW) is the process through which quasi-rigid spheroids align their maximum moments of inertia with the spin axis, pushing positive mass anomalies toward the rotational equator. // A variant of this mechanism, inertial interchange true polar wander (IITPW), involves discrete bursts of TPW of up to 90° in geologically short intervals of time if the magnitudes of the intermediate and maximum moments of inertia cross. This would result in a rapid movement away from the spin axis by the geographic location of the former pole with rotation of the entire solid Earth centered about the minimum moment of inertia located on the equator. // These two poles, with their stated polarity interpretation, are separated by about 68°; together they yield a plausible tropical position for Siberia, nearly on the opposite side of the globe from Australia. // If the velocities are due to TPW, however, such geodynamical considerations are obviated because the entire mantle would have rotated along with the lithosphere." [1] [2] (by Ethical Skeptic ☀)

Craig Stone

16,334 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

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Oceania ECDO visualization using the V4 model.[1] Australia and many of the Pacific islands have flood stories.[2] Australia bears many evidences of possible diluvial flows reinforced with numerous large salt deposits.[3] We also find a description of a possible rotation in the Australian paleomagnetic record from half a billion years ago.[4] Australian flood stories: "A great flood drowned most of the people. A few escaped to the top of the tall mountain Bibbiringda, which is inland of the northern bay of Cape Cleveland. [Frazer, p. 236]" and "Bunjil, the creator, was angry with people because of the evil they did, so he caused the ocean to flood by urinating into it. All people were destroyed except those whom Bunjil loved and fixed as stars in the sky, and a man and a woman who climbed a tall tree on a mountain, and from whom the present human race is descended. [Gaster, p. 114]"[2] Cook Islands flood story: "The rain god Aokeu caused five days and nights of rain, washing the red clay and small stones into the ocean and carving deep valleys. Rangi, the people's first chief, had been forewarned and led his people to Rangimotia, the central peak. Soon water covered everything except a long narrow strip of soil, and the tide continued rising. Rangi waded through water up to his chin to reach the temple of the supreme god Rongo, and appealed to him. Rongo looked at the war of the waters and cried "Enough!" The sea subsided and the rain stopped, leaving the island with its present landscape. Aokeu was judged the victor, because the sea had been stopped by the rocky heights, but but the rains flowed far into the ocean, carrying red clay to mark their progress. [Frazer, pp. 246-248; Vitaliano, p. 168]"[2] [1] [2] [3] [4]

Craig Stone

13,155 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

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