Page 361 - Russian History Viewed through Distorted Mirrors, Vol. 1
P. 361
Nicolai Levashov. Russian History Viewed through Distorted Mirrors. Vol. 1
Fig.20. — Nuclear winter came after the
catastrophe 13 016 years ago (2007). The
use of nuclear and thermonuclear weapons
changed the climate dramatically. In addi-
tion, a great number of volcanoes func-
tioning at the same time threw an enor-
mous amount of gases and volcanic dust
into the atmosphere. The latter, as it got
into the higher layers of the atmosphere,
created a screen through which sunlight
could hardly penetrate. As a result, there
was twilight on Midgard-earth for a long
time even in the day-time. It quickly grew
colder because of the lack of sunlight and
heat. The glaciers of the old poles failed to
thaw, as icy “hats” appeared on the new
ones very quickly. The sharp drop in tem-
perature resulted in the new poles’ glaci-
ers reaching the middle latitudes.
At the same time, the “old” poles’
glaciers did not have time to thaw, and the common planetary temperature drop made
them increase. Owing to this, the pole glaciers reached enormous sizes and covered
enormous areas not only in the northern hemisphere but also in the southern one. For
example, it is known that once there were tropical jungles which almost instantly
grew into an icy kingdom under kilometres of ice in the Antarctic continent. This
kind of thing is possible only when the planetary poles change their position sharply,
which is precisely what happened when the small Moon Fatta fell on Midgard-earth.
Fig.21. — The nuclear winter and sharp cold
snap after the planetary catastrophe 13, 016
years ago (2007) resulted in the formation of
an enormous glacial cover which reached
middle latitudes. A greater part of the lands
of our ancestors appeared in the “kingdom of
the Snow Queen”. A lot of people died in the
nuclear war and ensuing natural catastrophe.
Those who managed to survive had to move
south. In order to imagine the boundaries of
the glaciers, it is enough to look at the south
boundary of permafrost in Siberia and the Far
East on a modern map.
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