Matthew LaCroix
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
So it goes like this.
The energy comes out of Antarctica.
It comes out and goes through the North Pole and it's an energy flow and there's magnetic North and South Poles.
They're saying that this is the most significant excursion of that they've seen bar none in the last 42,000 years.
And so what I'm saying is that when you then put this into the mix and you identify the older and younger dryas events, but you separate them from the last shampa event, you then get a working timeline.
You then start to get where you can piece some of these events together because we know that the saya sutra event was not the same event that's described by Plato.
They're not even close to the same event described, right?
But what is Solon told in Egypt?
Remember, he says... So for those who don't know, Solon goes down to Egypt.
He's the first Westerner to be in ancient Egypt at that time.
He meets with two priests in Egypt at the Temple of Neith in Sais.
One of them is named Sanchus, and the other one is named...
synophis of heliopolis most people don't know that so both of these individuals they tell him this ancient history long before even the records that he knows about existed in which they say you greeks remember one deluge but there have been many mostly of water and fire remember so why would we why would we think there's one event then
Right?
So that's why I've been able to separate out the Zayasudra flood, the beginning, with the Younger and Older Dryas as being the end, and then we can start piecing together a timeline.
Then we can start putting this all together because that's not the only evidence we have to line these things up.
I'm giving you the catastrophe evidence first as we start working through this.
That lava field just happened to be the best representation of that, of any in the world, and that's why they used it.
So here is a graph that most people don't know about.
These are Greenland ice cores, not Antarctic, because Greenland only goes back 20,000 years because the Greenland ice cap is only 20,000 years old.