Ep038 Randall Carlson Podcast Tunguska's Geocosmic Lessons - Extraordinary Interaction -Kosmographia

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Kosmographia Ep038 The Randall Carlson Podcast with Brothers of the Serpent – Kyle and Russ, Normal Guy Mike and GCREX admin Bradley, from 07/06/20. RC reviews some of the Tunguska witnesses’ extraordinary accounts and shares photos from Leonid Kulik’s team excursions into the blast zone (treks that are worthy of a high-budget movie) as we ponder what forces could have inspired the frightful anecdotes and created the many odd features that remain – some of them reminiscent of Carolina Bays. A quote from Isaac Asimov points out the coincidences of timing and location that allowed it to leave plenty of evidence for study without killing a single human. Scientific observations and secondary effects included seismic and pressure waves, new streams, bright nights across Europe, exotic materials in the soils, and genetic mutations. Finally: Were the Taurids the source for the Tunguska object and the clustered bombardments around the YDB?

Support Randall Carlson's efforts to discover and share pivotal paradigm-shifting information! Improve the quality of the podcast and future videos. Allow him more time for his research into the many scientific journals, books, and his expeditions into the field, as he continues to decipher the clues that explain the mysteries of our past, and prepare us for the future...

Video recording, editing and publishing by Bradley Young with YSI Productions LLC (copyrights), with audio mastered by Kyle Allen.

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Oooh yeah time to grab my headphones and lay in bed. The greatest story never told

insanebmxthomas
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In Albany western Australia i herd an air burst at midnight about 6 months ago. Apparently it exploded several KLM above. No damage but local social media went crazy. I thought my house roof was collapsing. This is what put me onto this podcast.

skunkworksu
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In 1999, southern Indiana, I watched a fiery meteor fly overhead, and I heard the sound above me. It sounded like a plane on descent with engines turned off combined with a deep crackling. It was low enough in the atmosphere that I could see white yellow and orange in the fire tail.
"It must've landed just over that hill." 😆😆😆

agethauno
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I can't tell you how much I look forward to these Podcast. Thank you for what you guys do.

jerryarmitage
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I'm so happy that I found this channel. Education at it's best. Keep up the work Brad. You guys are great!

dmkelley
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Hi Randall! Just a reminder to seek out your local float tank (sensory deprivation tank) for all of your back ache needs! I worked a float center for two years and spent over 100 hours in the hole.. It's right up your alley, buddy! Good luck!

claybowlproductions
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a.) Regarding the continuing and varying soundscape of the event: We tend to think of this as a point event, when actually it was linear - 100 km long or more, depending on the entrance angle of the object into the atmosphere. The instant the object passed through enough of the atmosphere to generate a real shock wave, sound was generated. However, the velocity of the object far exceeded the speed of sound, so the continuing, and diminishing, sounds were actually the first parts of the shock wave, the first sounds, as they finally caught up to the main detonation, or series of detonations. In other words, the observers actually would hear the sounds in the reverse order of how they were actually generated.

b.) Shape of the "impact swamps": As Zamora showed in his experiments, the shape is due to conical focus of impact against the surface. Therefor the steeper the impact angle, that is, the more vertical the impact energy at the site of the impact, the closer to circular the "impact swamps" would appear.

c.) Lack of trees in the "impact swamps": If I recall, one of the characteristics of the bays is a compacted clay type of surface at the actual bottom. While it might be possible that the ground at the point of the bay formation was sterilized, it really doesn't matter because the compaction of the soil would prevent aeration and the ready draining or flowing of water from the immediate surroundings. Even today, after many tens of thousands of years, the bays still don't drain. Deep roots of young plants would have been unable to get through the compacted layer, ground water would not be able to enter, and precipitation would pool in the newly formed bay. So, until enough organic infill occurred to give roots something to cling to and enough water could drain away (trees generally don't just start growing in the middle of lakes and ponds), there would be little that could grow in the site except very shallow rooted plants, which could themselves be easily torn up in a hard storm. Regrowth of substantial vegetation would take some time, especially with the short growing season of Siberia. Also, being above the permafrost layer, the roots and surrounding ground would freeze solid in the Siberian winter - probably killing most young plants.

d.) The impact occurred in the morning and the sun rises in the East, so how would it be possible that an object travelling from Southwest to Northeast could have been seen coming out of the immediate area of the sun? To have it be seen as coming out of the sun, wouldn't the observer need to be nearly on a line with the sun and the impactor, both of which would need to be in front of the observer? Which raises the question of whether or not the impactor came from the meteor stream we think it did. Or perhaps it actually got swung around the Earth gravitationally and came in from the opposite direction, West instead of East.

farranger
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Randall is a Quasar of knowledge and dry humor. Every school in the world would be better off with a Randall on staff. The flying alligator line was hilarious.
Jeff in Ohio

chadtrump
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Always impressed by the breadth and depth of research going on here.

Mrbfgray
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Thanks for posting this very interesting and informative episode.
I always leave your presentations feeling slightly more informed and dare I say intelligent.
Keep up the good work.

localbod
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my dad was a idiot when i was younger and i was waaay to close to st helens when it blew. i do remember the silence and the stillness of the lake (merwin). no birds, deer, squirrels absolutly no wildlife and so quiet

timlange
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Couldn’t the several “booms” or whatever noises be the comet or whatever breaking up, disintegrating or breaking into smaller pieces each time creating an explosion of some sort that would be audible?

danamcalister
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Thanks guys... getting up to date... Two more episodes to go... Lots of info, as usual, need some time to process... Probably replay as usual. Once again THANKS.!!!

PedroDelimaMarcano
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Every time I drive from Portland through the Columbia Gorge I can't help but be amazed by the landscape

mariajoseasbury
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Hi and thanks for a great show. Regarding the "swamp" at 54 : 14 and comparing it to Carolina Bays; I find that to be way too much of a stretch in this case. It is a solitary almost eliptcal puddle in what appears like a natural depression, so it is a natural puddle.
Unlike the earlier photo with multiple overlapping elipses. To me that photo resembles a 2 dimensional image of an explosion cloud. As if the shock wave is more like the outside of Mt St Helens dust plum, or like a billowing cumulus cloud. There you have an imprint of that feature because the ground was soft enough to conform to that billowy shape. The Carolina formations seem more like your mention of splattered slush bombs launched by aerial or ground explosions from cometary fragments. ( that's my two bits worth ..)
Thank you Brad !
you da man !

Unkl_Bob
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You once said you were working on Randall's streaming capabilities. Well I can just say you did great work with upgrading the quality of his stream.

As of learning aside from Randall's wisdom I just learnt about the mythology of the Phonecians, from the alleged writings of a Sanchuniathon said to have lived before the Trojan War. If I got it right the last surviving translation of a greek summary is from 300's AD or something.
Regardless of the original source it's more than 2000 years old and the story about the creation can be applied to advanced knowledge and the story of the serpent is amazing tied into Kosmographia material!
Did Randall cover it in any old lectures, or is it a potential subject? I always enjoy the mythological applications Randall explores.

CALLEJOHANSSON
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When embers burn out or are snuffed out in the air, they can make a sort of phut, phut noise, alot like bird wings flapping, little mini vacuums collapsing. Which would also produce heat.

taleandclawrock
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It's interesting to see Randell start looking at plasma universe ideas lately, , true open mindedness as he was wedded to rocks from space as the agent of catastrophe for some time.

michaelx
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Let me know when y’all are in the great PNW! I’d give anything to spend a day in the Columbia gorge and take some pics with you guys! Our landscape is truly amazing, especially when it’s creation starts to come into focus. I’ve lived in Oregon a majority of my life, and there’s things all over here that truly inspire a thousand questions. I’d enjoy hearing more about the Willamette Valley.

greenoregonian
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In regards to the whistling noise from some of the first hand accounts of meteors...

I used to work at a rock quarry in the foothills of northern Colorado. The air traffic from the north, travelling southward toward Denver International Airport (DIA), took many of the planes right over head. For some reason, due to the shape of the landscape, whenever the planes flew over head, they made this weird whistling sound. It was kinda neat. I've only ever heard that sound in that location, which means it had to be to due to the specific shape of the ground.

The rock quarry was located on the side of one of the first few foothills before the start of the rocky mountains, perhaps a few hundred feet high, and the previous foothill ran parellel to it, forming a north south valley, maybe 1 to 2 miles wide. Perhaps some of those first hand accounts were from people living in similar locations, where the meteor travelled parallel to valleys or likewise terrain.

eamonnholland