The ABCD Theory
The ABCD Theory
The ABCD Theory
With an estimated 100,000 species, the number of trees worldwide might total
twenty-five percent of all living plant species.
…
Trees exist in two different groups of vascular or higher plants,
thegymnosperms and the angiosperms. The gymnosperm trees include conifers,
cycads, ginkgophytes and gnetales; they produce seeds which are not enclosed in fruits,
but in open structures such as pine cones, and many have tough waxy leaves, such as
pine needles.
…
Trees are either evergreen, having foliage that persists and remains green
throughout the year, or deciduous, shedding their leaves at the end of the growing
season and then having a dormant period without foliage.
…
The number of trees in the world, according to a 2015 estimate, is 3.04 trillion, of
which 1.39 trillion (46%) are in the tropics or sub-tropics, 0.61 trillion (20%)
in the temperate zones, and 0.74 trillion (24%) in the coniferous boreal
forests.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree
Biodiversity is the variety of different types of life found on the Earth and the
variations within species.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biodiversity
This biodiversity is reflected in dendrochronology.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dendrochronology
For example:
Tree ring sensitivity [sudden change in growth conditions] has been associated with
volcanism.
Dendrochronologists studying conifer tree rings [from living trees and subfossil tree
remains] collected in Finnish Lapland identified seven [negative] outliers in their tree-
ring sensitivity [sudden change in growth conditions] data: 4866 BC, 2850 BC, 2564 BC,
1464 BC, 330 BC, 536 AD and 1601 AD.
Fig. 1 A mid- and late-Holocene chronology of climatic downturns.
Tree-ring sensitivity (i.e., sudden change in growth conditions).
Please note that only negative departures are given, the values therefore indicating
growth reductions.
A chronology of climatic downturns through the mid- and late- Holocene: tracing the
distant effects of explosive eruptions from palaeoclimatic and historical evidence in
northern Europe
Samuli Helama, Jari Holopainen, Marc Macias-Fauria, Mauri Timonen, Kari
Mielikäinen
Polar Research – Volume 32 – 2013
http://www.polarresearch.net/index.php/polar/article/view/15866
The ingenious dendrochronologists also used their tree-ring data to reconstruct summer
[July] temperatures from which they identified a slightly different set of six [negative]
outliers: 2564 BC, 1584 BC, 874 BC, 330 BC, 536 AD and 1601 AD.
The dendrochronologists then concluded [via the sulphate data in the Dye 3, GRIP,
NGRIP and GISP2 Greenland ice cores] that their 1601 AD and 536 AD outliers might
have been caused by volcanism and this led them to think “the same causal relationship
can be implied further back in time”.
Calendar year dates when the tree-ring signatures (i.e., growth reductions and
reconstructed temperatures) were concurrent were compared with sulphate data from
Greenland ice cores.
Our data show that earlier events were found to have occurred in the years 330 B.C.,
874 B.C., 1464 B.C., 1584 B.C., 2564 B.C. and 2850 B.C.
Interestingly, events of lesser magnitude followed the three major events in 542 A.D.,
1453 B.C. and 1579 B.C. by a few years.
A chronology of climatic downturns through the mid- and late- Holocene: tracing the
distant effects of explosive eruptions from palaeoclimatic and historical evidence in
northern Europe
Samuli Helama, Jari Holopainen, Marc Macias-Fauria, Mauri Timonen, Kari
Mielikäinen
Polar Research – Volume 32 – 2013
http://www.polarresearch.net/index.php/polar/article/view/15866
For example:
Narrowest tree ring events [severe environmental downturns] have been associated
with cometary debris [after having been previously associated with volcanism].
In 1988 Mike Baillie associated a narrow tree ring event beginning in 1628 BC with a
Santorini volcanic eruption.
There has recently been renewed interest in the dating of the violent eruption of the
Aegean island of Santorini in the second millennium BC, both by its possible effects on
tree-ring growth in the United States (suggesting a date of 1628–1626 BC), and by
acidity peaks in ice cores from South Greenland (suggesting 1645 BC).
We now show that oak trees growing on bogs in Northern Irelandproduce
significant concentrations of extremely narrow rings within a few periods less
than 20 years long and that these periodscorrespond to the dates suggested by
other methods for major volcanic eruptions.
In particular, one of them, corresponding to a short period beginning in 1628 BC,
was probably caused by Santorini.
This date is qualitatively better than those derived from carbon-14 or ice cores,
because it is based on an absolute tree-ring chronology.
With the chemistry and the isotope data it is possible to do a very precise dating for the
eruption.
The volcanic eruption is dated to AD 527 ± 1 year.
The AD 527 volcanic eruption is the only eruption in the period (Larsen et al. 2002).
The authors go on to say that this volcano is the only likely candidate to have caused
the 536–545 global event, but that the dating ‘suggest(s) that the event is not the same
one described by other sources’ (Larsen et al. 2002).
There are two ways to deal with this observation. One option is to disregard the dating
by the ice-core workers and simply assume that 527 ± 1 really means 536 or 540 –
there are currently no compelling arguments for moving the date derived from three
replicated ice-cores in this manner.
The other is to make the more logical jump, namely that the global environmental
downturn was not volcanic in origin, but rather wascaused by loading of the
atmosphere from another source, presumably from space.
Tree-Rings Indicate Global Environmental Downturns That Could Have Been Caused
By Comet Debris – M G L Baillie
Comet/Asteroid Impacts and Human Society: An Interdisciplinary Approach
Editors: Peter T. Bobrowsky and Hans Rickman
Springer – 2007
http://www.springer.com/us/book/9783540327097
This curious situation is further confused by the lack of support in the historical records
for the cometary debris theory [for the severe environmental downturns seen in Irish
oak tree-rings].
Mike Baillie has suggested the ammonium signal in the Greenland ice cores support his
cometary debris theory for the severe environmental downturn in 540 AD.
Unfortunately for Mike Baillie, the largest spike in the Greenland ammonium signal is
for 1014 AD which is not associated with a severe environmental downturn in the Irish
oak tree-ring chronology.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_Baillie
However, downsizing the ABCD theory to focus upon [generic] meteoroid debris does
yield some very interesting results.
Unfortunately, the meteoroid evidence doesn’t explain Mike Baillie’s marker dates in
the Irish oak tree-ring chronology.
But the historical records of meteor observations from Korea might just explain
the Little Ice Age because of their variable density banding [over the centuries] and their
seasonal variations which markedly peak during the last quarter of the year.
The Little Ice Age (LIA) was a period of cooling that occurred after the Medieval Warm
Period (Medieval Climate Optimum).
…
It has been conventionally defined as a period extending from the sixteenth to the
nineteenth centuries, or alternatively, from about 1300 to about 1850, although
climatologists and historians working with local records no longer expect to agree on
either the start or end dates of this period, which varied according to local conditions.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Ice_Age
We have compiled and analyzed historical Korean meteor and meteor shower records
in three Korean official history books, Samguksagi which covers the three Kingdoms
period (57 B.C — A.D. 935), Goryeosa of Goryeo dynasty (A.D. 918 — 1392), and
Joseonwangjosillok of Joseon dynasty (A.D. 1392 — 1910).
…
We have also analyzed seasonal variation of sporadic meteors from Korean records.
We confirm the seasonal variation of sporadic meteors from the records of Joseon
dynasty with the maximum number of events being roughly 1.7 times the minimum.
The Korean records are compared with Chinese and Japanese records for the same
periods.
Major features in Chinese meteor shower records are quite consistent with those of
Korean records, particularly for the last millennium.
Analysis of historical meteor and meteor shower records: Korea, China, and Japan
Hong-Jin Yang, Changbom Park, Myeong-Gu Park
Icarus 175 (2005) 215-225
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0501216
The Korean meteor evidence [whilst being far from conclusive] is at least a viable
explanation for the variability of the Little Ice Age and many of the chemical [and
particle] anomalies found in the Greenland ice cores.
A meteoroid is a small rocky or metallic body travelling through space.
Meteoroids are significantly smaller than asteroids, and range in size from small
grains to 1 meter-wide objects.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meteoroid
The visible light produced by a meteor may take on various hues, depending on the
chemical composition of the meteoroid, and the speed of its movement through the
atmosphere.
As layers of the meteoroid abrade and ionize, the colour of the light emitted may
change according to the layering of minerals.
Colours of meteors depend on the relative influence of the metallic content of the
meteoroid versus the superheated air plasma, which its passage engenders:
Orange-yellow (sodium)
Yellow (iron)
Blue-green (magnesium)
Violet (calcium)
Red (atmospheric nitrogen and oxygen)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meteoroid
See: https://malagabay.wordpress.com/2014/04/12/greenland-the-cape-york-iron-
meteorites/
See: https://malagabay.wordpress.com/2014/04/15/deprecating-the-ovifak-iron-
meteorites/
The Tunguska event was a large explosion that occurred near the Stony Tunguska
River, in what is now Krasnoyarsk Krai, Russia, on the morning of 30 June 1908
(N.S.).
The explosion over the sparsely populated Eastern Siberian Taiga flattened 2,000 km2
(770 sq mi) of forest and caused no known casualties.
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Catastrophic Dendrochronology
In "Catastrophism"
1. rishrac says:
December 9, 2015 at 04:10
Comets cough and splutter in the ‘nothingness’ of space so it’s an electrical plasma
phenomenon. So too I suspect with the meteorites rather than burning up in air as
commonly believed, I would guess they are burning up in the ionosphere since most
meteoric burnouts are witnessed at night when the ionosphere is closer to earth. So it’s
an electric discharge we are seeing not some fuel omens-in-the-sky, white coated monk-
priest-scientiste of the settled faith variety’s prognostication that its caused by air-
friction.
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3. ggladyshev says:
December 9, 2015 at 14:14
4. craigm350 says:
December 10, 2015 at 18:00
Thank you!
Reply