Randall Carlson
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Squaring the circle will get you there.
And I'm doing an extended series, the definitive series on the Younger Dryas.
Going back to the discovery of the flower back in Sweden in the 1800s and coming forward right to we're doing now because I...
played a role in getting the idea of the Younger Dryas out there along with Graham Hancock.
I thought people need to know about this.
And so I kind of went on the bandwagon about 20 years ago.
Nobody had the slightest idea what it was.
So now it's kind of becoming part of the conversation, but I want to
I'm laying out the whole story of research, questions, answers, you know, paradoxes, and then figuring out, was it local?
Was it regional?
Was it global?
Maybe it was more than global.
Maybe it was cosmic.
This was the best.
Enjoyed every minute of it.
What we're seeing here is evidence that planet Earth is part of a much larger cosmic ecosystem and that sometimes things happen in the cosmos and it translates directly into events down here below in the surface of the planet. The question is not, does it work? The question is, how does it work? To me, I look at it and go, this is, it's transmutation, it's alchemy.
What we're seeing here is evidence that planet Earth is part of a much larger cosmic ecosystem and that sometimes things happen in the cosmos and it translates directly into events down here below in the surface of the planet. The question is not, does it work? The question is, how does it work? To me, I look at it and go, this is, it's transmutation, it's alchemy.
What we're seeing here is evidence that planet Earth is part of a much larger cosmic ecosystem and that sometimes things happen in the cosmos and it translates directly into events down here below in the surface of the planet. The question is not, does it work? The question is, how does it work? To me, I look at it and go, this is, it's transmutation, it's alchemy.
So many anomalous things that they don't fit the standard narrative of history. And at some point we got to say, okay, we have to reconsider our models. We're looking at the peak discharge that created Grand Coulee. It might've been 350 million cubic feet per second. That's 10 times more. than the combined flow of every single river on Earth.
So many anomalous things that they don't fit the standard narrative of history. And at some point we got to say, okay, we have to reconsider our models. We're looking at the peak discharge that created Grand Coulee. It might've been 350 million cubic feet per second. That's 10 times more. than the combined flow of every single river on Earth.