These podcasts discuss topics related to science. Some of the podcasts analyze examples of bad science or deal with new discoveries that are still not accepted by mainstream science.
This presentation discusses the mathematical model for calculating the size of the Younger Dryas comet and analyzes impacts of ice on various targets.
This presentation discusses the Younger Dryas impact and evaluates methods for calculating the energy of the impact to derive the size of the asteroid or comet that caused the cataclysm.
The human obsession for understanding the movement of celestial bodies and the properties of light made it possible to deduce the chemical composition of the stars and planets.
The Younger Dryas cataclysm brought death and destruction 12,900 years ago and triggered a global cooling event that lasted 1300 years.
The Carolina Bays and the Nebraska Rainwater Basins have withstood erosion from wind and water for many centuries, but their features are slowly being degraded. This presentation examines how the bays have responded to some of the destructive processes.
The Glacier Ice Impact Hypothesis proposes that the Carolina Bays were created by oblique secondary impacts of glacier ice boulders ejected by an extraterrestrial impact on the Laurentide Ice Sheet.
Examination of the chemistry of vitrification to determine if there is a link between the vitrified stones that are found in Iron Age Scottish hillforts and in the ancient megalithic stone work of South America.
This presentation examines whether the vitrified forts of Scotland could have been created by a lost ancient technology, by accidental or enemy fire, or by a coronal mass ejection of the Sun.
Analysis of the Carolina Bays near Fayetteville, North Carolina to determine the characteristics of the ejecta from the impact of a meteorite 12,900 years ago on the Laurentide Ice Sheet.