Earth’s Magnetic Fields

Shared Joy

Jedi Council Member
Hi,

this video illustrates the movement of poles and the variations in the magnetic field around the world.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sIayxqk0Ees

Also explains the way this field protects us from solar wind.
If you scroll down there are some more videos worth watching

FWIW
 
Thanks for the link Shared Joy. Worth a watch everyone. Valuable brief summary of some of the elements at play right now.
 
Scientists: Earth’s Magnetic Fields Carry Biologically Relevant Information That ‘Connects All Living Systems’

http://www.collective-evolution.com/2016/11/22/scientists-earths-magnetic-fields-carry-biologically-relevant-information-that-connects-all-living-systems/

Science has recently shed light on the fact that what we used to perceive as ‘human’ aura is actually real. All of our bodies emit an electromagnetic field, and this fact plays a very important role far beyond what is commonly known when it comes to understanding our biology, and the interconnectedness we share with all life.
 
Sow said:
Scientists: Earth’s Magnetic Fields Carry Biologically Relevant Information That ‘Connects All Living Systems’

http://www.collective-evolution.com/2016/11/22/scientists-earths-magnetic-fields-carry-biologically-relevant-information-that-connects-all-living-systems/

Science has recently shed light on the fact that what we used to perceive as ‘human’ aura is actually real. All of our bodies emit an electromagnetic field, and this fact plays a very important role far beyond what is commonly known when it comes to understanding our biology, and the interconnectedness we share with all life.

Interesting article. Some main extracts:

Research findings have shown that as we practice heart coherence and radiate love and compassion, our heart generates a coherent electromagnetic wave into the local field environment that facilitates social coherence, whether in the home, workplace, classroom or sitting around a table. As more individuals radiate heart coherence, it builds an energetic field that makes it easier for others to connect with their heart. So, theoretically it is possible that enough people building individual and social coherence could actually contribute to an unfolding global coherence.
...
So, what exactly is heart coherence? Well, it implies order, structure, and as Dr. Rozman puts it, “an alignment within and amongst systems – whether quantum particle, organisms, human beings, social groups, planets or galaxies. This harmonious order signifies a coherent system whose optimal functioning is directly related to the ease and flow in its processes.” Basically, feelings of love, gratitude, appreciation and other ‘positive’ emotions not only have an effect on our nervous system, but they have an affect on those around us, far beyond what we might have previously thought.
...
Every individual’s energy affects the collective field environment. The means each person’s emotions and intentions generate an energy that affects the field. A first step in diffusing societal stress in the global field is for each of us to take personal responsibility for our own energies. We can do this by increasing our personal coherence and raising our vibratory rate, which helps us become more conscious of the thoughts, feelings, and attitudes that we are feeding the field each day. We have a choice in every moment to take to heart the significance of intentionally managing our energies. This is the free will or local freedom that can create global cohesion.
...
The hypotheses of the researchers and scientists behind this process are as follows:
  • The Earth’s magnetic fields are a carrier of biologically relevant information that connects all living systems
  • Every person affects this global information field. Large numbers of people creating heart-coherent states of love, appreciation, care, and compassion can generate a more coherent field environment that benefits others and helps off-set the current planetary discord and incoherence
  • There is a feedback loop between human beings and Earth’s energetic/magnetic systems
  • Earth has several sources of magnetic fields that affect us all. Two of them are the geomagnetic field that emanates from the core of the Earth, and the fields that exist between Earth and the ionosphere. These fields surround the entire planet and act as protective shields blocking out the harmful effects of solar radiation, cosmic rays, sand, and other forms of space weather. Without these fields, ice as we know it could not exist on Earth. They are part of the dynamic ecosystem of our planet

Think about the current state of our planet. We are definitely not in coherence, with all of the violence, war, hate, and greed that still plague our planet, we have a lot of work to do. We do not yet know how these thoughts, emotions, and feelings are affecting the entire planet, and what type of information these experiences are encoding into once electromagnetic fields, and how it is interacting with that of the Earth’s.
...
Changes in these fields [Earth’s and Sun’s magnetic fields] have also been shown to affect our brain waves, heart rhythms, memory, athletics performance, and overall health.
...
Research is indicating that human emotions and consciousness encode information into the geomagnetic field and this encoded information is distributed globally. The Earth’s magnetic fields act as carrier waves for this information which influences all living systems and the collective consciousness.
...
This research [...] will further push along the fact that our attitudes, emotions, and intentions actually matter, a lot, and that these factors within the realm of non-material science can affect all life on Earth. Coherent, cooperative intention could impact global events and improve the quality of life on Earth. Practicing love, gratitude, appreciation, and bettering ourselves as individuals is one out of many action steps towards changing our planet for the better.
...
So What Can You Do?

So, next time you are upset, angry, or frustrated, try observing yourself and how you react. It’s great practice to try and lose your buttons so they cannot be pushed, and work on your personal development. You have to do whatever you can to feel good, which could include exercise, eating healthy, minimizing electronics time, spending time with friends, animals, and more. You could practice being less judgemental, and work on your intentions by figuring out if they are coming from a ‘good’ place. You could be more grateful, you could help others, and you can treat others how they want to be treated.

There are a number of tools you could use, like meditation, for example, to assist you with these action steps. Bottom line, if you are at peace with yourself, and have control over your emotions, you are helping the planet and others around you. If you are constantly angry, harming others or have negative intentions, you could be doing the exact opposite.

Well, the article tells us "we still do not know how these thoughts, emotions and feelings are affecting the entire planet, and what kind of information these experiences are encoding in electromagnetic fields once, and how it is interacting with that of Earth," so maybe it is logical to think that just as positive feelings bring order to the "system", negative feelings bring chaos to it.

IMO good article that maybe we could publish on SOTT with many comments...
 
5-6 minutes Read / Snip:
Erratic motion of north magnetic pole forces experts to update model that aids global navigation.
Update, 9 January: The release of the World Magnetic Model has been postponed to 30 January due to the ongoing US government shutdown.
Something strange is going on at the top of the world. Earth’s north magnetic pole has been skittering away from Canada and towards Siberia, driven by liquid iron sloshing within the planet’s core. The magnetic pole is moving so quickly that it has forced the world’s geomagnetism experts into a rare move.
On 15 January, they are set to update the World Magnetic Model, which describes the planet’s magnetic field and underlies all modern navigation, from the systems that steer ships at sea to Google Maps on smartphones.

The most recent version of the model came out in 2015 and was supposed to last until 2020 — but the magnetic field is changing so rapidly that researchers have to fix the model now. “The error is increasing all the time,” says Arnaud Chulliat, a geomagnetist at the University of Colorado Boulder and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA’s) National Centers for Environmental Information.

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Солнечных вспышек нет, поэтому на Земле не может быть геомагнитной бури, но полярные огни заполнили небо над Рингвасси в Норвегии.

Гуннар Хилдонен сфотографировала:

-Я был снаружи, убирая снег с дороги, когда облака разошлись, и мощное сияние зажгло безумно красивое шоу ... -Я был там. из ниоткуда ... активность Солнца была низкой, так что это был действительно большой сюрприз ...
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Действительно, полярные огни не были в прогнозе на 4 января. Скорость солнечного ветра была низкой, и никакой геомагнитной активности не ожидалось.

Что произошло?

В магнитном поле Земли была относительно небольшая трещина, и она оставалась открытой в течение многих часов.

Медленно движущийся солнечный ветер просачивался сквозь щель, в конечном итоге давая топливо для мощного всплеска полярных сияний.

Подобные явления наблюдались в Финляндии и Исландии.
Магнитный щит Земли дал трещину Извините по-русски.
 
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There are no solar flares, so there may not be a geomagnetic storm on Earth, but the polar lights have filled the sky above Ringwassi in Norway.

Gunnar Hildonen took a picture:

-I was outside clearing snow from the road as the clouds broke apart and a powerful glow lit up an insanely beautiful show ... -I was there. -I was out of nowhere... the sun's activity was low, so it was a really big surprise...
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Indeed, the polar lights were not in the forecast for January 4. Solar wind speed was low and no geomagnetic activity was expected.

What happened?

There was a relatively small crack in the Earth's magnetic field, and it remained open for many hours.

Slowly moving solar wind was seeping through the gap, eventually providing fuel for a powerful burst of polar lights.

Similar phenomena were observed in Finland and Iceland.
Магнитный щит Земли дал трещину . I'm sorry in Russian.
 
Continuation:The interplanetary magnetic field near the Earth has sharply turned 180 degrees
On January 6, something unexpected happened on a surface of the earth in northern Norway - sudden change of currents of the earth and a magnetic field has been fixed, and for 15 minutes before the interplanetary magnetic field near the Earth has sharply turned on 180 degrees, and density of a solar wind has jumped more than in 5 times.

Rob-Stammes-Magnetic-shockwave_1578349087_strip.png


"Electric currents have begun to flow," says Rob Stamms, who controls earth currents at the Polarlightcenter geophysical observatory in Lofoten.
"It was like some kind of shock wave," says Stamme. - My instruments picked up a sudden strong change in earth currents and our local magnetic field. It was really sudden."
The NASA ACE spacecraft also found something unusual. About 15 minutes before the anomaly in Norway, the interplanetary magnetic field near the Earth turned 180 degrees and the solar wind density jumped more than 5 times.

The earth may have crossed a fold in the current layer of heliosphere-giant wavy membrane of electric current pulsing through the solar system. Such crossovers can cause these kinds of effects.

As the flows flowed through the earth, the polar lights filled the sky. Ryanne Elsain photographed a splash of lights from Utsjoki, Finland.
- What a surprise!" says Elaine. "The polar lights were sudden and dynamic, with fast moving green needles and several purple stripes!"

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"We couldn't see the polar lights in Northern Norway because of the cloud cover," says Stammez. "We had to settle for electricity under our feet."
It's taken from here: Межпланетное магнитное поле вблизи Земли резко развернулось на 180 градусов (Sorry about the Russians.)
 
It seems there's an abnormally in Earth’s magnetic field above the South Atlantic ocean. The magnetic field being more weak.
So I was wondering if it can be an harbinger of more changes on the planet.


 
Apparently the use of red ochre in human prehistory wasn't just ceremonial, but could also have been a natural sunscreen used 40,000 years ago in order to protect human skin from harmful UV rays while the Earth's magnetic shield dropped.

University of Michigan researcher Agnit Mukhopadhyay reconstructed what the magnetic field around Earth may have looked like during the Laschamps excursion, a time period between 42,200 and 41,500 years ago when the north and south poles wandered from their geographic locations. Image credit: Agnit Mukhopadhyay, University of Michigan

University of Michigan researcher Agnit Mukhopadhyay reconstructed what the magnetic field around Earth may have looked like during the Laschamps excursion, a time period between 42,200 and 41,500 years ago when the north and south poles wandered from their geographic locations. Image credit: Agnit Mukhopadhyay, University of Michigan

Study: Wandering of the Auroral Oval 41,000 Years Ago (DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adq7275)

Ancient Homo sapiens may have benefited from sunscreen, tailored clothes and the use of caves during the shifting of the magnetic North Pole over Europe about 41,000 years ago, new University of Michigan research shows.

These technologies could have protected Homo sapiens living in Europe from harmful solar radiation. Neanderthals, on the other hand, appear to have lacked these technologies and disappeared around 40,000 years ago, according to the study, published in Science Advances and led by researchers at Michigan Engineering and the U-M Department of Anthropology.

The team found that the North Pole wandered over Europe when the magnetic field’s poles started to flip positions, a natural process that has happened around 180 times over Earth’s geological history. While the magnetic reversal didn’t complete at the time, the magnetic field weakened to cause aurora to occur over most of the globe, and allowed more harmful UV light to come in from space.

Around the same time, Homo sapiens appear to have started making tailored clothing and using ochre, a mineral that has sun-protective properties when applied to the skin, with greater frequency. These behaviors could have contributed to their spread throughout Europe and Asia at a time when the Neanderthal population was declining.

Agnit MukhopadhyayAgnit Mukhopadhyay

“In the study, we combined all of the regions where the magnetic field would not have been connected, allowing cosmic radiation, or any kind of energetic particles from the sun, to seep all the way in to the ground,” said Agnit Mukhopadhyay, lead author and U-M research affiliate in climate and space sciences and engineering.

“We found that many of those regions actually match pretty closely with early human activity from 41,000 years ago, specifically an increase in the use of caves and an increase in the use of prehistoric sunscreen.”

During the Laschamps excursion, a time period between 42,200 and 41,500 years ago, the north and south poles wandered from their geographic locations. At this time, aurora, depicted here by gradients of green and yellow, were able to be seen over most of the globe. Image credit: Agnit Mukhopadhyay, University of MichiganDuring the Laschamps excursion, a time period between 42,200 and 41,500 years ago, the north and south poles wandered from their geographic locations. At this time, aurora, depicted here by gradients of green and yellow, were able to be seen over most of the globe. Image credit: Agnit Mukhopadhyay, University of Michigan

Wandering poles​

Earth’s magnetic field is generated by the movement of molten metals in its outer core. These motions create electric currents, which in turn produce a magnetic field that extends in a halo around the planet.This halo helps protect Earth from cosmic radiation—the stuff that thins Earth’s ozone layer and lets in more UV light. The interaction of these particles with Earth’s magnetic field results in aurora as well.

Mukhopadhyay began building models of this interaction using the Space Weather Modeling Framework, a versatile numerical tool developed and maintained by the U-M Center for Space Environment Modeling, to study the sun, heliosphere and planetary space environments, including that of Earth.

The sun continually throws hot gases and charged particles toward Earth, which, because of their extremely high temperatures, act as a plasma system. Mukhopadhyay developed a model that predicts how this plasma system interacts with Earth’s magnetic field, ultimately driving the formation of the aurora.

This magnetic field has a north and south orientation: the North and South poles. The orientation of the magnetic field is why you typically only see aurora at the North and South poles, where magnetic fields are the strongest. But occasionally throughout history, these poles wander from their traditional geographic positions. These are called “geomagnetic excursions,” says Mukhopadhyay. The most recent event is called the Laschamps excursion, which occurred about 41,000 years ago.

Working with Sanja Panovska, a researcher at Germany’s GFZ Helmholtz Centre for Geosciences, Mukhopadhyay created a 3D reconstruction of Earth’s geospace system. To do this, the researchers combined three separate models: one global model that reconstructs the geomagnetic field during the Laschamps excursion, a model of the space plasma environment around Earth, and a model that predicted what Earth’s aurora looked like at the time. The resulting 3D model showed where charged particles were able to slip through Earth’s geomagnetic field.

The researchers found that during the Laschamps excursion, Earth’s magnetic field reduced in size to about 10% of its current strength. This allowed Earth’s magnetic poles to droop down near the equator and for its magnetic field lines to expand. This would have also allowed aurora to be seen all over Europe and into northern Africa.

The researchers then laid their 3D map of Earth’s space system over the world, and found that the time period of the Laschamps excursion—which lasted from about 41,000 to 39,000 BP—coincided with periods of change for groups of humans living on the planet.

This figure shows a map of the combined coverage of the region where aurora were able to be seen on Earth during the Laschamps excursion, a time period between 42,200 and 41,500 years ago. The map also shows areas of human activity on a global scale. Image credit: Agnit Mukhopadhyay, University of MichiganThis figure shows a map of the combined coverage of the region where aurora were able to be seen on Earth during the Laschamps excursion, a time period between 42,200 and 41,500 years ago. The map also shows areas of human activity on a global scale. Image credit: Agnit Mukhopadhyay, University of Michigan

Cosmic rays, radiation and survival​

Neanderthals and Homo sapiens coexisted in Europe, with Homo sapiens—often called anatomically modern humans—arriving roughly 56,000 years ago, says Raven Garvey, U-M associate professor of anthropology. By about 40,000 years ago, Neanderthals were no longer identified as a species in Europe.

Raven GarveyRaven Garvey

“What some of the differences are between these species, between Neanderthals and anatomically modern humans, that might account for that disappearance has been a major anthropological question for decades,” Garvey said.

Clothing may have been a contributing factor, she said. The technological means of producing clothing that fitted to the body has been discovered at archaeological sites associated with anatomically modern humans, but not necessarily Neanderthals.

However, at sites associated with anatomically modern humans, archaeologists have found not only scrapers used in hide production, but also needles and awls—items associated with sewing. According to Garvey, tailored clothing has a twofold benefit: It was significantly warmer and the added warmth meant that people could travel farther from their hearths and shelters in search of food.

Tailored clothing could have also provided another unintended benefit—protection from sun damage, she said.

There are multiple detrimental effects of solar radiation, including ocular pathologies and folate depletion (which can lead to birth defects and increased infant mortality), “so having protection against solar radiation would also have conferred significant advantage to anyone who possessed it,” Garvey said.

Homo sapiens may have also ramped up their use of ochre, a naturally occurring pigment composed of iron oxide, clay and silica that has been used by many species of hominins for a very long time. People used it to paint objects, cave walls and even to decorate their bodies.

“There have been some experimental tests that show it has sunscreen-like properties. It’s a pretty effective sunscreen, and there are also ethnographic populations that have used it primarily for that purpose,” Garvey said. “Its increased production and its association primarily with anatomically modern humans (during the Laschamps) is also suggestive of people’s having used it for this purpose as well.”

Finding caution in the (solar) wind​

The researchers are careful to underscore that their findings aren’t definitive. However, they are a new way to look at already existing data.

“I think it’s important to note that these findings are correlational and (ours is a) meta analysis, if you will,” Garvey said. “But I think it is a fresh perspective on these data in light of the Laschamps excursion.”

In addition to examining how previous excursions might have affected humans long ago, Mukhopadhyay said the 3D model offers people a way to predict how excursions might affect us in the future.

“If such an event were to happen today, we would see a complete blackout in several different sectors,” he said. “Our communication satellites would not work. Many of our telecommunication arrays, which are on the ground, would be severely affected by the smallest of space weather events, not to mention the human impacts which would also play a pretty massive role in our day-to-day lives.”

Mukhopadhyay also pointed out that their work also highlights that people were still able to survive on a planet whose atmosphere looked a lot different than ours does today, and this has implications for the search for life on planets other than Earth.

“Many people say that a planet cannot sustain life without a strong magnetic field,” he said. “Looking at prehistoric Earth, and especially at events like this, helps us study exoplanetary physics from a very different vantage point. Life did exist back then. But it was a little bit different than it is today.”

Study co-authors also include Michael Liemohn, Daniel Welling and Austin Brenner of Michigan Engineering, Natalia Ganjushkina of both Michigan Engineering and the Finnish Meteorological Institute, Ilya Usoskin of the University of Oulu and Mikhail Balikhin of the University of Sheffield.

So I suppose it would a good idea to be more cautious about sunlight when the shields go down.

There's this early session mentioning sunlight's degenerative effects.

Session 4 March 1995

Q:(L) It was stated that the earth once had a water vapor canopy. Was this one of the reasons for longevity in that time?

A: Yes, and already answered this. Review transcripts.

Q: (L) What are the effects of sunlight on the human body now as opposed to then?

A: Degenerative.

Q:
(L) Does that mean that we should avoid sunlight because we no longer have our canopy?

A: You cannot avoid enough to matter.

Maybe the shields going down will be cause enough UV influx to make avoiding sunlight more of a priority?

I've wondered about this for a while now, because many natural health influencers usually recommend sun exposure for its many purported benefits.

Sunlight was mentioned along with another set of environmental threats in another session:

Session 5 August 1995


A: Please be aware that in the state of being that you currently occupy, and in the environment in which you currently reside, as third density beings, there are many environmental stresses upon your physical being, which you often overlook. And, focus on any particular one is rather pointless without focusing on the remainder. So, therefore, perhaps it is wise not to focus on any at all unless you wish to choose the other path, which is to attempt to focus on all, and this can be most difficult. So, as you are zeroing in, as it were, on one area, such as electronic anti-pest devices, is understandable, but rather futile unless you also wish to focus on food intake, smoking, the pollutants of mechanical devices, of sunlight, the thinning of the ozone, vibrations from sound pollution and a myriad of other consequences that you normally overlook and put out of your mind. It is not necessary to become worried about any given environmental occurrence.

Maybe, as with all things, balance is key?
 
Apparently the use of red ochre in human prehistory wasn't just ceremonial, but could also have been a natural sunscreen used 40,000 years ago in order to protect human skin from harmful UV rays while the Earth's magnetic shield dropped.
I was also wondering why many of the earliest known mines were for getting red ochre. The official theory that it was just for ceremonial purposes seems to be questionable at best.

Brave AI summary of the magnetic pole flips:
The last major reversal of Earth's magnetic poles occurred approximately 780,000 years ago during the Stone Age. This event was studied using ancient lava flows, which provided precise timing and helped scientists understand the complex process that took place over about 22,000 years.

Another significant event related to the magnetic poles was a temporary reversal about 41,000 years ago, which lasted for 250 years before the poles returned to their original positions.

Prior to these events, the Earth's magnetic poles have flipped about 183 times in the last 83 million years, with an average interval of around 450,000 years.

Maybe the double pole flip within a few hundred years happened closer to 50,000 BC when the first Atlantean cataclysm happened.
 
I was also wondering why many of the earliest known mines were for getting red ochre. The official theory that it was just for ceremonial purposes seems to be questionable at best.

Brave AI summary of the magnetic pole flips:


Maybe the double pole flip within a few hundred years happened closer to 50,000 BC when the first Atlantean cataclysm happened.

The 41,000 year Laschamp marker also corresponds with data in Cycles of Cosmic Catastrophes indicating that the Earth was blasted by a distant supernova at that time period. This is is what's missing from the above article. It stands to reason that the nova caused the Laschamp excursion.

The authors of Cycles assume only tribal peoples living at the time, and not advanced Atlanteans. But even with an advanced culture, one could still see why ochre, if already known or discovered to be protective, would soon be considered very valuable or 'sacred'.

41,000 YEARS AGO

The Flash of Radiation

It was warm that night in Southeast Asia, too warm for a fire, but the tribe built one to roast the two deer they had killed that afternoon. At the edge of the rock shelter in the foothills of the mountains, some of the tribe members stretched out against rocks and others dozed while the meal cooked. They were tired; they had trotted for dozens of miles after trapping the deer.

Suddenly, high in the sky, a star exploded soundlessly. The colossal flash filled the night sky, shining brighter than the full moon. Instantly alert, some of the startled hunters grabbed their spears and jumped to their feet. As the shocked tribe looked up, the brilliant light in the sky wavered and shimmered. Larger now than the moon, it radiated glittering spikes of multicolored light in all directions. Around the frightened tribe, the nighttime landscape lit up under the eerie flickering glow, causing shadows to shift, flow, and merge as if demons crawled among the bushes. Fearful, the hunters edged backward toward the shelter. The stellar rays damaged oxygen in the atmosphere to create ozone. Like the smell after a strong thunderstorm, ozone filled the air with its unmistakable and pungent odor. Colliding with atoms of the atmosphere at nearly the speed of light, the deadly radiation launched cascades of particles that lit up the atmosphere with weird electrical effects. Multihued auroras shimmered across the Southeast Asian skies in unprecedented displays, and nearly nonstop lightning flickered from cloud to cloud or leaped earthward. Thunder rumbled nearly continuously as the tribe watched the strange lightning flash across the horizon.

Skilled as warriors, the men scanned the electrified sky looking for danger, but they confronted no earthly enemy—the true menace was beyond their senses. And it was unstoppable. For ten seconds, the intense radiation shot through their bodies and brains, and it was too much for some. A few dropped to the ground moaning; others quickly pulled the fallen ones into the shelter, but none of them would recover. The rest who were outside the cave moved quickly under the overhang, but most of them would not survive either. Because of the high altitude, the only ones that made it through were those in the cave who were shielded from the direct glare of the exploding star.

The Aftermath

After the initial flare, the light continued to grow brighter over the next few weeks, and it remained visible in the daytime for the next six months, appearing in the sky as a second sun or moon. When the supernova and the moon appeared together, there was no normal nighttime—the landscape was as brightly lit as a perpetual dawn. Gradually, the giant glow faded over many years, until it was no longer visible.

The radiation pulse was over quickly, but the effects were not. Europe, Africa, and the Americas were hidden from the supernova's direct glare and were mostly unaffected. However, in Southeast Asia and Australia, which bore the brunt of the exposure, the powerful rays sliced through leaves and flesh, damaging or killing animals and plant life all over the region. Afterward, temperatures plunged, putting even more stress on the survivors.

As vegetation wilted and turned brown across vast areas of Australia, the unstable weather touched off frequent lightning strikes, setting fires that raged unchecked across the devastated environment. Besides creating ozone, the barrage of radiation also formed nitrates and cooked up a brew of other chemicals that rose into the sky, so that most of Australia and Southeast Asia was covered by a lingering thick pall of dark smoke and
brown chemical haze.

The radiation was lethal for many animals, but those that survived were not much better off. Lack of food doomed many, and before long, nearly all Australia's largest animals disappeared, including huge kangaroos and giant bearlike animals called wombats. Smaller animals were affected too, and soon after the massive blast of cosmic rays, many species of lizards, snails, fish, birds, and frogs disappeared forever. Australia suffered through a major extinction, and by the time it was over, almost no animal weighing more than a few hundred pounds was left alive. Most of the rest of the planet was spared for a while.

The surviving people did not do well either. Within the first week or two, the radiation sickness began—nausea, lack of appetite, apathy, and hair loss. Population levels plummeted as sterility rose, and even when there were births, genetic damage was high. Most mutations were deleterious, with a high mortality rate, but other mutations were beneficial. From that great catastrophe, the survivors brought new genetic variations to the human gene pool, and after that time, human brain size began to grow larger. Gradually, from then on for thousands of years, a flurry of intense human progress occurred, as complex speech, new hunting technologies, art, and music appeared or expanded and went through rapid change.

It was also a time of increasing cosmic impacts. The pulse of radiation illuminated comets and asteroids orbiting the solar system, and when it struck the supernova-facing side of comets, the heat was intense enough to vaporize small amounts of their frozen compounds. As jets of gases escaped from the surface of giant comets and asteroids, they gently nudged these bodies into Earth-crossing orbits. Over time, the Earth and moon suffered increasing levels of bombardment from space. Then, after thousands of years, the barrage dwindled, and conditions on Earth slowly returned to normal. But there was more to come.
 
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