That seems to be what you have been talking about so far. And you seem to have no indication at all that Caesar knew or talked about ancient cataclysms. Which suggests that you have no real basis for your theory.
That Caesar was specifically speaking about the Younger Dryas events appeared to be the most relevant hypothesis. I don't believe that I discarded other events in my post, did I?
And you seem to have no indication at all that Caesar knew or talked about ancient cataclysms
I see; you would expect Homer to tell you that Odysseus was a fictional character and that the book is about the comets during the YD?
Which suggests that you have no real basis for your theory.
I would remain cautious about such bold takes. I have been expressively avoiding this kind of situation in my study. But - look, if you care, if you personally would like to go "there is no real basis for this theory" - no problem at all.
You seem to require a bold statement, by Caesar himself, that he wrote a book about comets - and not a book about him battling barbarians. Difficult to get! Meanwhile, I reserve myself the right to explore this avenue.
If you prefer to tap into the main stream Roman database, feel free - you will make findings. Meanwhile, me, I will tell myself that whichever text can be tampered with (and can be a possible account of YD comets).
C method - questioning, checking, double-checking, triple-checking. That's good for the brain.
Atlantis won't disappear like that, it seems, isn't it?
Caesar did not talk or write about being captured by pirates. That was written by others like Plutarch who lived many decades after Caesar's death. This pirate story has nothing to do with what Caesar wrote himself about the Gallic wars.
I did not know that it was referring to Plutarch. Let's not extend the phenomenon of forgery, present in Plutarch, to the Gallic Wars, then.
We can still say that "historical accounts about Caesar are not accurate; while they depict battles". This generalization still works.
The matter is that Plutarch does not deviate that much, in fact, from the Gallic war... Battles, etc... Same style.
When checking about the Plutarch pirate episode, this is what the C's said:
A: Caesar was on another kind of adventure of the scientific kind.
Q: (Pierre) Can you elaborate on this "scientific kind" of adventure?
A: Short travels with his teacher, Posidonius.
This indicate that Caesar was traveling for "scientific purposes". When the teacher dies, what does the pupil do? I suppose that he would pursue his teacher's work.
But neither Firestone's research nor the subsequent research by the Comet Research Group looking into the Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis have identified for sure any YD impacts outside of North America. It is possible that some of those were airbursts that did not leave a crater.
The material, that he found out, in Europe, has the same composition than the ones he found in the US.
Airburst or comet crashing is another matter. It does not invalidate that this material remains included in "the Younger Dryas layer", right? So this would provide validity for all European sites.