Tsunami England Südengland 1607
Geschrieben von BBouvier am 08. Mai 2007 13:48:53:
In Vers III/70 finden wir:
"Gross-Britannien, gemeint ist England,
Wird durch mächtige Wassermengen überflutet..."Bei der Nachforschung, ob dieses Geschehen Futur
oder Vergangenheit sei, habe ich folgendes gefunden:
(Scharnier untig)
Die Zeilen 3 und 4 des Verses lassen sich dann
politischem Geschehen 1609 zuordnen.=>
'Worst natural disaster'
The flood of 1607 has been described
by experts as the worst natural disaster
to hit Britain.
Eyewitness accounts of the disaster
told of "huge and mighty hills of water"
advancing at a speed
"faster than a greyhound can run".(Die Welle hat ein halbes tausend Quadratkilometer
verwüstet.)"When I was young,
I remember seeing in some books
in the library some woodcuts of pictures
of people stranded on the top of high roofs,
trees and clinging onto the back of sheep
- very dramatic scenes," said Professor Haslett.This included a layer of sand in mud deposits
in five different places:
Hill in South Gloucestershire, Rumney Wharf in Cardiff,
Llangennith Moor in Swansea,
Croyde Bay in north Devon and
Northam Burrows near Bideford, Devon.
Pebbles and pieces of broken shell
were found in these areas.
They claimed these deposits were brought
in from the open ocean."There's no beach for miles so that's an indication
that this stuff has been transported
a considerable distance," said Dr Bryant.Und das hier wird Detlef interessieren!!!:
=>
"The way some of the flow behaves,
it will not(!!) break the material (!!),
so to find material as fragile
as this in this type of deposit
shows that it was a tsunami."
......
Other UK tsunamis include a 70ft high
wave that hit Scotland 7,000 years ago,
following a massive
landslip in Norway. <=!!Gruss,
BB
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