The Coming Global Superstorm
The Coming Global Superstorm – Review
Regarding the frozen mammoths, Discovery Channel Canada’s website had this to say: "First, were the mammoths quick-frozen? No. Almost all of the frozen specimens obtained thus far have been rotten, and in some cases, mutilated by scavengers before effectively freezing. Even the finely ground around the aforementioned Beresovka mammoth, as well as the mammoth’s flesh, stunk of decay. Had effectively freezing been instantaneous, no decay would have occurred." "They eventually died, not by effectively freezing, but by asphyxiation. Evidence for that is the detection of vessels even filled with coagulated blood…" "Second, the stomach contents. Turns out both the Mamontova and Beresovka mammoths had eaten a type of plants, comprising grasses, sedges and other tundra plants, as well as the cones and branches of northern trees. Overall these plants characterize a flora that would exist in slightly warmer and wetter conditions than exist in Siberia today, but such conditions are well within the climatic variability of the past." "Finally the numbers of frozen mammoths don’t support the theory of a catastrophe. It’s been currently estimated that there might have been about 50,000 mammoths surviving in the Arctic, while something like forty have been commonly found frozen. Hardly the notices of a tragic event." The evidence tells for istself.