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To: Woody who wrote (6336)11/21/2025 9:54:36 AM
From: Doug R  Respond to of 6356
 
The crustal displacement concept comes down to olivine and how it reacts to an electromagnetic pulse.
It's the most common mineral at the mantle/crust boundary.
While in equilibrium, its electro-mineral properties help maintain the bond between crust and mantle.
Pulse it strongly enough and that bond gets broken.
It's a sort of a liquifaction between the layers.



To: Woody who wrote (6336)12/4/2025 12:44:27 AM
From: Doug R  Respond to of 6356
 
The problem I have (4 images/text below) that remains unaddressed: This interpretation places the “map” at the time of the summer solstice around 15–17k yrs ago, when these southern constellations would have been visible from the latitude of Lascaux, just before they disappeared below the horizon forever due to precessional shift.