10 Mahuika Crater  
 In 2003, a member of the Holocene Impact Group named Dallas Abbott  and her colleagues from the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of the  Columbia University published a paper that identified the location of a  submarine crater on the southern edge of the New Zealand continental  shelf, just south of the Snares Islands, 120km southwest of Stewart  Island.  It was given the name Mahuika crater.  The crater is 20 ± 2  kilometers wide and over 153 meters (501 feet) deep.  Based on elemental  anomalies, fossils, and minerals, Abbott argues that an impact event  occurred around 1443 AD. (568 years ago).  A later study by Edward  Bryant placed the impact date on February 13, 1491.
 Around the year 1400, the natives of New Zealand abandoned their  southern coastal settlements and moved inland.  A large number of  volcanic eruptions occurred in New Zealand during the 15th century.   Rangitoto Island was formed in the Hauraki Gulf near Auckland.  A  collection of animal species became extinct in New Zealand towards the  end of the 15th century, including the moa, which were eleven species of  flightless birds, the giant Haast’s Eagle, and the flightless predatory  Adzebills.  
 Researchers were attracted to the area after it was discovered that a  large collection of beach sand is present on Stewart Island 220 meters  (721 feet) above sea level at Hellfire Hut and 150 meters (492 feet)  above sea level at Mason Bay.  In eastern Australia, there are  megatsunami deposits with maximum run-ups of over 130 meters (426 feet)  and a C-14 age of 1500 AD.  Megatsunami deposits also occur on the  eastern side of Lord Howe Island in the middle of the Tasman Sea,  implying a source crater further east, which is towards the Mahuika  crater.  
 The largest historical earthquakes on record have produced a maximum  tsunami range of 40 to 60 meters (131-196 feet).  Abbott et al. has  suggested that a bolide impact, including the collision of a large  meteorite, asteroid, comet, or other celestial object, would explain  both the geological and anthropological evidence better than an  earthquake.  The most reliable and widespread evidence found at the site  are natural glass rocks called tektites.  Tektites form when a massive  impact liquefies its target and sends melt into the atmosphere.  The  Mahuika tektite field contains glassy tektites that appear orange, light  green, and clear in visible light.  Tektites have been found over 220  km from the crater.  
 Wollongong University geographer Ted Bryant believes the tsunami may  have reached the coast of New South Wales, where he has found evidence  of waves up to 130m high that hit about AD 1500.  Australian author  Gavin Menzies has claimed that a mega-tsunami could have caused the  destruction of all but one of 100 ships he says were dispatched by China  to circumnavigate the globe in AD 1421.  The New Zealand tsunami expert  Dr James Goff disagrees with the claims and says there is no evidence  that an impact event occurred so recently.  The discovery of the Mahuika  crater remains a controversial subject.
 9 
 Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis
The Younger Dryas stadial, also referred to as the Big Freeze, was a  geologically period of cold climatic conditions and drought that began  in 10,800 BC (12,811 years ago).  The cause of the Big Freeze has been a  controversial subject.  Nothing of the size, extent, or rapidity of the  climate change has been experienced since.  The Big Freeze replaced the  forest land in Scandinavia with glacial tundra.  It caused the level of  snow accumulation in the mountains to increase and the North American  Clovis culture disappeared after the event.  The climate change is  correlated with the extinction of Pleistocene megafauna. 
 A collection of geologists have claimed the Big Freeze was caused by  the collapse of the North American ice sheets, while others have  supported the Younger Dryas impact hypothesis.  The impact hypothesis  claims that a large air burst or impact event initiated the Younger  Dryas cold period.  The evidence discovered for an impact event includes  a charred carbon-rich layer of soil that has been uncovered at some 50  Clovis-age sites across the North American continent.  The layer  contains unusual materials, including metallic microspherules, carbon  spherules, magnetic spherules, iridium, charcoal, soot, and fullerenes  enriched in helium.  The material was found at the very bottom of the  “black mat” of organic material that marks the beginning of the Younger  Dryas period.  
 In January 2009, transmission electron microscopy evidence was  recovered showing nanodiamonds in the Earth layer around the time of the  Big Freeze.  The evidence was published in the journal Science.  The  article suggests that the diamonds provide strong evidence for the  Earth’s collision with a rare swarm of carbonaceous chondrites or comets  at the onset of the Younger Dryas cool interval.  The event produced  multiple airbursts and possible surface impacts, with severe  repercussions for plants, animals, and humans in North America.  It has  been suggested that this impact event brought about the extinction of  North American large mammals, including camels, mammoths, the giant  short-faced bear and numerous other species.  
 The evidence for an impact event in North America has been dismissed  by most geologists and historians.  Specialists have studied the claim  and concluded that there was never such an impact, in particular because  various physical signs can’t be found.  A collection of the impact  signatures have not been corroborated by independent tests.  Of the  twelve original lines of evidence, seven have proven to be  non-reproducible.  The hypothesis is no longer considered viable in the  scientific community.  However, it remains a controversial topic.
 8 
 Flims Rockslide
The Flims Rockslide is the biggest landslide known to have occurred  in the Alps.  The effect of the slide is still widely visible today.  It  moved some 12 km3 (2.9 cu mi) of rock.  The top of the slide can be  found at 2,700 meters (8,858 ft) above sea level north of Flims at Mount  Fil de Cassons.  The fallen rock is limestone dating from the Mesozoic,  including Mergel.  The angle of slide is only 20-25 degrees.  The  falling debris formed a dam on the Vorderrhein River and created a lake  in the Ilanz area.  The river Rhine eventually crossed the debris field  in an area named Ruinaulta. 
 A geologist named Clemens Augenstein performed a collection of tests  at the site.  He studied sediment found embedded in the limestone dust.   Using carbon dating, the limestone dust was found to be 10,055 years  old (plus/minus 195 years).  This puts the slide around 8000 BCE.  A  second source of identification was found in the wood discovered inside  the debris, some 2 miles (3.2 km) upstream of the mouth of river  Rabiusa.  The wood was identified as coming from the Fil de Cassons  area.  Tests confirmed a carbon date of approximately 10,000 years.  
 After the Flims Rockslide, most of the water escaped through the  upper section of the debris.  The event created rivers and lakes that  have been gradually disappearing.  One example is a lake named Caumasee,  which is near Flims, in the Grisons, Switzerland.  The lake is located  in a huge forest and the water level varies according to underground  flow.  The landslide forced the river Rhine to create the Ruinaulta  canyon and shaped the huge forest land surrounding Flims.  The area is a  haven for wildlife and is protected by cliffs several hundred meters  high.  The structures are beautiful and accessible by Rhaetian Railways.   The destination is a popular place for rafting.
 7 
 Missoula Floods
The Missoula Floods refer to the cataclysmic floods that swept across  eastern Washington State and down the Columbia River Gorge at the end  of the last ice age.  In the 1920s, geologist J Harlen Bretz became the  first person to identify the floods.  He was interested in the unusual  erosion features located in the Columbia River Plateau.  In 1923, Bretz  published a paper which showed that the channeled scablands in eastern  Washington were caused by massive flooding.  It has been realized that  approximately 15,000 years ago a branch of the Cordilleran ice sheet  moved out of Canada into the Idaho panhandle region.  At that location  it formed a 2,000 feet (610 m) high ice dam that blocked the mouth of  the Clark Fork River, creating glacial Lake Missoula.  
 As the depth of the water in Lake Missoula gradually increased, the  pressure at the bottom of the lake lowered the freezing point below the  temperature of the ice dam.  This allowed liquid water to seep into the  cracks present in the dam.  After a rupture occurred, the area  experienced a tremendous flood.  As the water emerged from the Columbia  River gorge, it backed up again near Kalama, Washington.  The flooding  created temporary lakes at an elevation of more than 400 ft (120 m),  covering the Willamette Valley to Eugene, Oregon and beyond.  
 During the floods, the Columbia River channel downstream was blocked  by the Okanogan lobe of the Cordilleran, sending water into Glacial Lake  Columbia.  As a result the water could not continue down the Columbia  River, being forced instead to flood over the highlands of Eastern  Washington, vastly transforming the landscape by forming the Grand  Coulee, Moses Coulee, the Channeled Scablands, Dry Falls, Palouse Falls  and many similar features.  The cycle weakened the ice dam so much that  it could no longer support the pressure of the water behind it, and  eventually failed catastrophically.  Over a period of 2,000 to 2,500  years (13,000-15,000 years ago), the ice dam failure and flood was  repeated 40-60 times, leaving a lasting mark on the landscape.   Lake-bottom sediments deposited by the Missoula Floods are the primary  reason for the agricultural richness of the Willamette Valley.  
 The maximum flow speed of the floods approached 36 meters/second (130  km/h or 80 mph).  After J.T. Pardee studied the canyon of the Flathead  River, he estimated that flood waters reached an excess of 45 miles per  hour (72 km/h).  The water flow was nine cubic miles per hour, more than  ten times the combined flow of every river in the world.  Maximum  discharge was about 1.3 billion gallons per second, about 1,000 times  the Columbia River’s current average flow.  When the flood arrived at  the current site of Portland, OR, it was still about 400 feet (121 m)  above the normal river stage.  The force of the water has caused a  collection of scientists to assert that the cataclysmic floods must have  had multiple unidentified sources of water.  The largest known rock  transported by the Missoula Floods is pictured, located on the Ephrata  Fan, near Soap Lake, Washington.
 6 
 Minoan Eruption
The Minoan eruption of Thera was a major catastrophic volcanic  eruption that occurred in the middle of the second millennium BCE.  It  was one of the largest volcanic events in recorded history.  The  eruption devastated the island of Thera (also called Santorini),  including the Minoan settlement at Akrotiri, as well as communities and  agricultural areas on the coast of Crete.  Geological evidence has  indicated that the Thera volcano has erupted many times over a period of  several hundred thousand years.  The volcano will violently erupt then  eventually collapse into a roughly circular seawater-filled caldera.  
 The volume of ejecta recorded during the Minoan eruption was  approximately 100 km3 (24 cu mi), placing the Volcanic Explosivity Index  at 6 or 7.  On Santorini, there is a 60 m (200 ft) thick layer of white  tephra that overlies the soil clearly delineating the ground level  prior to the eruption.  This layer has three distinct bands that show  the different phases of the eruption.  This suggests that the volcano  gave the local population a few months warning.  Since no human remains  have been found at the Akrotiri site, this preliminary volcanic activity  probably caused the island’s population to flee.  
 During the Minoan eruption the landscape was covered by pumice  sediments.  In some places, the coastline vanished under thick tuff  depositions, and in others coastlines were extended towards the sea.   The eruption resulted in an estimated 30 to 35 km (19 to 22 mi) high ash  plume which extended into the stratosphere.  In addition, the magma  underlying the volcano came into contact with the shallow marine  embayment, resulting in a violent steam eruption.  The eruption  generated a 35 to 150 m (115 to 490 ft) high tsunami that devastated the  north coast of Crete, 110 km (68 mi) away.  
 One method used to establish the date of the Minoan eruption was the  study of tree-rings.  Tree-ring data has shown that a large event  interfering with normal tree growth in North America occurred during  1629–1628 BCE (3639 years ago).  Evidence of a climatic event around  1628 BCE has been found in studies of growth depression of European oaks  in Ireland and in Sweden, as well as bristlecone pines in California,  bog oaks in England, and other trees in Germany.  Crop failure in China  has also been cited.  The eruption devastated the nearby Minoan  settlement at Akrotiri, which was entombed in a layer of pumice.  It  inspired Greek myths and may have caused turmoil in Egypt.  The exact  date of the Minoan eruption remains a controversial subject.
 5 
 Burckle Crater
The Holocene Impact Working Group is a group of scientists from  Australia, France, Ireland, Russia and the USA who have hypothesized  that meteorite impacts on Earth are more common than previously  supposed.  The group uses satellite imagery to locate the presence of  landforms such as chevrons which are thought to have been caused by  megatsunamis.  Chevrons, which are wedge-shaped sediment deposits, often  point in the direction of specific impact craters.  The group feels  that major chevrons around the world were deposited by tsunamis that  originated from impact craters. 
 After searching for massive chevrons, the Holocene Impact Working  Group identified the Burckle crater, which is an undersea crater located  to the east of Madagascar and west of Western Australia in the southern  Indian Ocean.  The position of the crater was determined in 2006 using  evidence of prehistoric chevron dune formations in Australia and  Madagascar that allowed the team to triangulate its location.  
 Specifically, the group used the Fenambosy Chevron, which is one of  four chevron-shaped land features on the southwest coast of Madagascar,  180 meters (590 feet) high and 5 km inland.  The Burckle crater is  located about 900 miles southeast of the Fenambosy Chevron.  Core  samples from the Fenambosy Chevron contain high levels of nickel and  magnetic components that are associated with impact ejecta.  The Burckle  crater is estimated to be about 30 km (18 mi) in diameter and located  at 12,500 feet (3,800 m) below the surface of the ocean.  
 The crater has not been dated by radiometric analysis.  The Holocene  Impact Working Group have suggested that it was formed about 5,000 years  ago (c. 2800–3000 BC) during the Holocene epoch.  Near the crater,  unusual metals have been reported, including carbonate crystals,  translucent carbon spherules, and fragments of mineral glass.  Numerous  ancient writings from various cultures make reference to a “great  flood.”  It has been hypothesized that these legends may be associated  with the impact event.  During this time in history the world  experienced the end of the Early Harappan Ravi Phase, the end of the  pre-dynastic “antediluvian” rulers of the Sumerian civilization and the  start of the First Dynasty of Kish.
 4 
 Tartessos
Tartessos was a harbor city and surrounding culture on the south  coast of the Iberian Peninsula (in modern Andalusia, Spain) at the mouth  of the Guadalquivir River.  The city appears in historical documents  from Greece starting in the middle of the first millennium BC.  The name  Tartessos fell out of use around 2000 years ago.  Historians have  suggested that the city may have been suddenly lost to flooding.  A  large collection of discoveries have been made in the area that has  helped form a picture of the Tartessian culture. 
 The Tartessians were rich in metal.  In the 4th century BC the  historian Ephorus described “a very prosperous market called Tartessos,  with much tin carried by river, as well as gold and copper from Celtic  lands.”  The people from Tartessos became important trading partners of  the Phoenicians. Pausanias, writing in the 2nd century AD, gave details  on the location of the city.  He wrote that Tartessus (formerly known as  Baetis) is a river in the land of the Iberians, which is running into  the sea by two mouths.  Between the two mouths was a city of the same  name.  The river formally known as the Baetis is now the Guadalquivir.   Thus the site of the city of Tartessos may have been lost and buried  under the shifting wetlands.
 This area of the world holds some geological significance.  The  Guadalquivir River delta has gradually been blocked by a sandbar  stretching from the mouth of the Rio Tinto, near Palos de la Frontera,  to the riverbank opposite Sanlúcar de Barrameda.  The land has become  protected under the Doñana National Park.  In 1994, UNESCO designated  the park as a World Heritage Site.  UNESCO has recognized Doñana as a  Biosphere reserve.  It is a wetland of international importance and  holds a biodiversity unique in Europe.  The park contains a great  variety of ecosystems.  It shelters wildlife including thousands of  European and African migratory birds, fallow deer, Spanish red deer,  wild boar, European badger, Egyptian mongoose, and endangered species  such as the Spanish Imperial Eagle and Iberian Lynx.  
 In September 1923, archaeologists discovered a Phoenician necropolis  (burial ground) with human remains at the site.  A large collection of  artifacts were unearthed from the South-Western Iberian Bronze culture.   The culture is characterized by individual burials, in which the  deceased was accompanied by a knife of bronze.  Tartessic artifacts  linked with the Tartessos culture have been discovered, and many  archaeologists now associate the “lost” city with Huelva, Spain.
 Tartessos has been associated with Atlantis.  Both Atlantis and  Tartessos were believed to be advanced societies which collapsed when  their cities were lost beneath the waves.  In 2011, a team led by  Richard Freund claimed to have found strong evidence for the location of  Atlantis in Doñana National Park based on underground and underwater  surveys.  Spanish scientists have dismissed the claims.  Biblical  archeologists often identify a place named Tarshish in the Hebrew Bible  with Tartessos.
 3 
 Flooding of the Black Sea
The Black Sea is an inland sea bounded by Europe, Anatolia and the  Caucasus.  It is connected to the Atlantic Ocean via the Mediterranean  and Aegean Seas.  In the aftermath of the last ice age, water levels in  the Black Sea and the Aegean Sea rose independently until they were high  enough to exchange water.  The Black Sea was originally a land-locked  fresh water lake and was flooded with salt water during the Holocene.  The influx of salt water essentially smothered the fresh water below it,  which meant that no oxygen could reach the deep waters.  This created a  meromictic body of water.  This type of underwater environment is  hostile to many biological organisms that destroy wood in the oxygenated  waters and provides an excellent site for deep water archaeological  survey. 
 In a series of expeditions, a team of marine archaeologists led by  Robert Ballard identified what appeared to be ancient shorelines,  freshwater snail shells, and drowned river valleys in roughly 300 feet  (100 m) of water off the Black Sea coast of modern Turkey.  Radiocarbon  dating of freshwater mollusk remains has indicated an age of about 7,500  years.  The team discovered three ancient wrecks to the west of the  town of Sinop at depths of 100 m.  According to a report in New  Scientist magazine, the archeologists uncovered an underwater delta  south of the Bosporus.  They discovered evidence for a strong flow of  fresh water out of the Black Sea in the 8th millennium BC.
 The evidence has helped support the Black Sea deluge theory.  In  1997, William Ryan and Walter Pitman from Columbia University published a  hypothesis which cited information on a massive flood through the  Bosphorus (strait) that occurred in ancient times.  They claim that the  Black and Caspian Seas were vast freshwater lakes, but then about 5600  BC (7611 years ago), the Mediterranean spilled over a rocky sill at the  Bosphorus, creating the current link between the Black and Mediterranean  Seas.  The event is said to have flooded 155,000 km2 (60,000 sq mi) of  land and significantly expanded the Black Sea shoreline to the north and  west.  According to the researchers, “Ten cubic miles (42 km3) of water  poured through each day.” 
 It is widely accepted by the scientific community that the floods did  occur and similar events have been recorded in the post-glacial period.   However, there is a debate over the suddenness and magnitude of the  water shift.  Publications have been made to support and to discredit  the Black Sea deluge theory, and archaeologists still debate the  hypothesis.  The claims have led some to associate this catastrophe with  prehistoric flood myths.  The oscillating hypothesis specifies that  over the last 30,000 years, water has intermittently flowed back and  forth between the Black Sea and the Aegean Sea in relatively small  magnitudes, and does not necessarily predict that any sudden “refilling”  events.
 2 
 Storegga Slide
The three Storegga slides are considered to be amongst the largest  known landslides.  They occurred in the Norwegian Sea, at the edge of  Norway’s continental shelf, 100 km north-west of the Møre coast.  The  landslides caused a very large tsunami in the North Atlantic Ocean.   Based on carbon dating of plant material recovered from sediment  deposits, the latest incident occurred around 6100 BC. (8111 years ago).   In Scotland, traces of the tsunami have been recorded, with sediment  being discovered in Montrose Basin, the Firth of Forth, up to 80 km  inland and 4 meters above current normal tide levels.  
 The Storegga slides have been investigated as part of the activities  to prepare the Ormen Lange natural gas field, which is located on the  Norwegian continental shelf.  It has been determined that the triggering  mechanism of the slides was likely a large earthquake, together with  gases released from the decomposition of gas hydrates.  One conclusion,  made public in 2004, has hypothesized that the slide was caused by  material built up during the previous ice age, and that a recurrence  would only be possible after another ice age.  A new slide in the area  would trigger a very large tsunami that would be devastating for the  coast around the North Sea and the Norwegian Sea.  
 Around the time of the last Storegga slide, geologists have  identified that a land bridge existed in the area named Doggerland.   Doggerland linked Great Britain with Denmark and the Netherlands across  what is now the southern North Sea.  Geological surveys have suggested  that Doggerland was a large area of dry land that stretched from  Britain’s east coast across to the present coast of the Netherlands and  the western coasts of Germany and Denmark.  The potential for historic  dry land in the area was first discussed in the early 20th century, but  intensified in 1931 when a commercial trawler began to recover the  remains of land mammals, including mammoths and lions.  Ancient tools  and weapons were also uncovered.  
 Doggerland is believed to have been a land mass that included  lagoons, marshes, mudflats, and beaches.  It was a rich hunting ground  populated by Mesolithic human cultures.  The area was physically  submerged through a gradual rise in sea level.  It has been hypothesized  that coastal areas of both Britain and mainland Europe were inundated  by the tsunami triggered by the Storegga slide.  The event would have  had a catastrophic impact on the contemporary Mesolithic population, and  separated cultures in Britain from those on the European mainland.  One  area of Doggerland said to have been destroyed in the Storegga slide is  the island of Viking Bergen, located between modern Shetland and  Norway, at the boundary of the North Sea and Norwegian Sea.
 1 
 Bridge of the Gods
The Bridge of the Gods is a natural bridge that was created by the  Bonneville slide.  The Bonneville slide is a major landslide that dammed  the Columbia River near present-day Cascade Locks, Oregon in the  Pacific Northwest of the United States.  The event is remembered in  local legends of the Native Americans as the Bridge of the Gods.  
 The Bonneville landslide sent a large amount of debris south from  Table Mountain and Greenleaf Peak, covering more than 5.5 square miles  (14 km2).  The debris fell into the Columbia Gorge close to modern-day  Cascade Locks, Oregon, blocking the Columbia River with a natural dam  approximately 200 feet (61 m) high and 3.5 miles (5.6 km) long.  The  impounded river formed a lake and drowned a forest of trees for about 35  miles (56 km).  The Columbia River eventually broke through the dam and  washed away most of the debris, forming the Cascade Rapids.  Geologists  have determined that debris from several distinct landslides in the  same area overlap, forming what is called the Cascades landslide  complex.  The Bonneville landslide was the most recent, and perhaps the  largest landslide of the complex.  
 The Cascadia fault is a subduction zone that stretches from northern  Vancouver Island to northern California.  It is a long fault that  separates the Juan de Fuca and North America plates.  The geological  record of the Pacific Northwest reveals that “great earthquakes” occur  in the Cascadia subduction zone about every 500 years on average, often  accompanied by tsunamis.  There is evidence of at least 13 events at  intervals from about 300 to 900 years with an average of 590 years.  The  Cascadia fault is thought to be the cause of the massive Cascades  landslide complex.  
 On January 26, 1700, a massive magnitude 8.7 to 9.2 megathrust  earthquake occurred in the Cascadia subduction zone.  Evidence  supporting the earthquake has been gathered in the 2005 book The Orphan  Tsunami of 1700, by geologist Brian Atwater.  Atwater has spent much of  his career studying the likelihood of large earthquakes and tsunamis in  the Pacific Northwest region of North America.  The earthquake produced a  tsunami so large that contemporary reports in Japan noted it, allowing  Atwater to assign a precise date and approximate magnitude to the  earthquake.  
 After studying the coastline across the Pacific Northwest, Atwater  found evidence that an enormous tsunami devastated the area around the  year 1700.  The earthquakes path and size are confirmed by evidence of a  dramatic drop in the elevation of the northwest coastal land, recorded  by buried marsh and forest soils that underlie tidal sediment.   Atwater’s team found a layer of tsunami sand on the subsided landscape.   The most important clue linking the tsunami in Japan and the earthquake  in the Pacific Northwest comes from studies of tree rings which show  that red cedar trees killed by the lowering of coastal forests into the  tidal zone have outermost growth rings that formed in 1699, the last  growing season before the tsunami.  
 Recent findings conclude that the Cascadia subduction zone is more  complex and volatile than previously believed.  Geologists predict a 37  percent chance of a M8.2+ event in the next 50 years, and a 10 to 15  percent chance that the entire Cascadia subduction will rupture with a  M9+ event within the same time frame.  Geologists have also determined  that the Pacific Northwest is not prepared for such a colossal quake.  The tsunami produced by such an event could reach heights of 80 to 100  feet (24 to 30 m).  
 The date of the Bonneville landslide is an unresolved issue among  people studying it.  Some researchers promote a date around 1450, while  others favor a date around 1700, which would connect the landslide to  the 1700 Cascadia earthquake.  Native American legends from the  Klickitat tribe describe an earthquake that shook so violently that a  huge bridge fell into the river, creating the Cascades Rapids of the  Columbia River Gorge.  The legends date to the early 18th century.
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