Irish/Celtic connections to North-African/Middle-Eastern origins documentary

I posted a little bit about this topic here.

One interesting thing in the above video is the map which shows Ireland below the Great Britain. Of course, modern people dismiss such a map as simple inaccuracy, but what if the map was actually correct?

Saw this map of the "Pangean mountain range" on twitter. It's supposedly dated to a hundred million years ago or so. The person commented that the Appalachians were once part of a longer mountain range that connected to Ireland and Scotland and beyond. That made me think about the recent era connections between those places, particularly in terms of music and dance, due to migrants from Ireland and Scotland ending up in the Appalachians.

The next, and final, thought (so far) was to wonder if the breakup or 'drifting' of the continents that supposedly happened over hundreds of millions of years actually happened much more quickly and much more recently. Basically, I wonder if the look of the global landmass in the Jurassic or Cretaceous, for example, is actually how it looked before the cataclysm that caused the younger dryas and ended last ice age. Good question for the next session perhaps. Not sure if this has already been discussed elsewhere already.


Related to the above, website Malaga Bay theorises that Scotland's landmass has significantly shifted in recent time, and provides geological data to support his theory.

He adheres to the missing time hypothesis, as detailed by Gunnar Heinsohn, but more recently i think he's gone as far as saying there's over 1000+ years missing, so bear that in mind. He also has a post or 2 on expanding earth theory too.

The whole blog post is below, and somewhere on his site, he also provides a gif of the alleged land movement.


(Ryan) Can major catastrophic events shift areas temporarily to fourth density?

A: Yes

Q: (Ryan) Would such shifts make the lithosphere more "plastic" and easily "reshape-able"?

A: Yes

So perhaps in the past, Ireland really was much closer to Africa than it is today.
 
I don't know where to post this, but I remembered that I talked about this phenomenon before in this topic, so I will post it here.

A few days ago, I talked with a man who claims that near his house, in a village where my father lives, there is an area called "Lake", and that there is a rocky shore with dock rings for ships, which tells us that once upon a time there was a lake in the valley of the village, where now only a small river flows. The valley is known for high moisture with a lot of fog days, but there is no lake.

I was wondering is there any explanation for the existence of a lake in the past and I found a Wikipedia article that says that once upon a time there was a Pannonian sea in the Central Europe, during which time there were many lakes in the Balkans that now do not exist. And there is also an article about the valley of my father's village, where it is said that where now are two hills between which the river flows, in the past there was one big hill that blocked the exit of that river, which created a lake. And that at a certain point in time, the hills separated and the water from the lake flowed away.

That sounds like a reasonable explanation to me. The only problem with this story is that, officially, this all happened a few millions years ago, where there were no human beings on the planet, and nobody to make dock rings, or to remember that there was a lake and to keep that memory through the name of the area.

So, how to explain this? Have these tectonic movements on our planet really happened much more recently than how it is officially described?
 
So, how to explain this? Have these tectonic movements on our planet really happened much more recently than how it is officially described?
Well I remembered this post on how Scotland moved and that was fairly recently

I also remember that the Cs were asked about earth´s landmass or something and they said that earth is more "plastic" than we think, something along those lines, but I can´t find that session. :nuts:
 
Well I remembered this post on how Scotland moved and that was fairly recently

Yes, we talked about this topic before, but we haven't established any definite years to these happenings. It could fit in the Scotland movement theory which supposedly happened a little over thousand years ago. Perhaps this lake disappeared even later.

I also remember that the Cs were asked about earth´s landmass or something and they said that earth is more "plastic" than we think, something along those lines, but I can´t find that session. :nuts:

You can find it in my previous post in this topic. :-)
 
So, how to explain this? Have these tectonic movements on our planet really happened much more recently than how it is officially described?
Or could it be that there were civilizations that were around much earlier than the "experts" want to admit?
 

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