Quote:
Originally Posted by Robbie
I was watching the History Channel last night.
It was a documentary on one of the earliest great civilizations...The Egyptians.
They showed excavations of small "towns" back in 9000 B.C.
But these places are in the middle of The Sahara Desert. How could that be?
Then they showed bones from elephants, giraffes, antelopes, bison, etc.
How could that be?
Here's how and WHY:
9000 B.C. The Sahara Desert was a savannah. Full of green vegetation, fields of green for animals to graze on. And early humans were there as hunters and gatherers.
Somewhere around 5000 B.C. the rains stopped, the area dried up...and became a harsh desert that we know today.
Guess what? The Earth CHANGES. With or without human actions.
Unless Mark Prince would like to suggest that perhaps primitive people were racing around in their evil cars and burning coal to stay warm etc., etc.
That's the one thing I never see "climate change" nutcases ever explain...the world's climate CHANGES over time no matter what.
But that's always left out of the equation. It's always mankind driving everything.
I say...that's just pelain egotistical nonsense.
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id have to dig it up, but there is a lot of evidence that a large portion of the nile delta was under water..
it's also said it will be underwater again:
http://www.dailynewsegypt.com/2013/0...0-say-experts/
no one disputes that the earth changes. what is in contention, is how does human activity
impact natural earth cycles? Cycles that are in, if you will forgive the poetic turn of phrase, 'a fine balance'