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Strategies & Market Trends : Taking Advantage of a Sharply Changing Environment
NRG 160.89-0.3%12:29 PM EST

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To: Hawkmoon who wrote (1303)1/17/2019 4:46:12 PM
From: Doug R1 Recommendation

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Hawkmoon

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Hawk,

It would depend on where the major energy of a CME would be focused on Earth I imagine. For the Younger Dryas, one could assume that if it happened then, it would have been during Boreal Summer since "buttercups" were blooming at that time for mammoths to have been eating them.
So how would the ice sheet be behaving during Summers back then?
How much of it would have been impacted by a CME hitting in the North American West where the black mat stratigraphy seems to be most prevalent?
How would the runoff of any melted portion of the ice sheet behave?
Is there any data from the ice core scientists that one could go look at to find out if there's the kind of evidence you propose?
I couldn't begin to make any guess. It might be in the data already but has been interpreted in some other way. There could be thousands of papers written about the ice cores each with a highly specific focus so one might pop up that relates to your question.
If I come across anything as I continue trying to look at as much as possible related to GSM, pole shift, CME, crustal displacement, prep info and whatever else, I'll be sure to bring it here.
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