lol Attagirl; keep up the balanced view of issues scientific (sarcasm). Got any links of your own on the subject or do you just dismiss mine arbitrarily? If you're just being arbitrary, then so am I and any links you provide, I will arbitrarily avoid as being crap (which they usually are anyway).
Please continue to stick to your spurious versions of your quasi-science. Those of us with lobotomies will stick to reality and keep chuckling about your follies.
Actually if you had used the link I provided, they admit that MOST of Antarctica was ice-free even during the biggest spell of warming on the planet, but not entirely ice-free. At the time there was literally no ice on Earth, there also likely was no life on it yet.
As far as your electrostatically built mountains go ..... roflmao
Not even prolonged lightning can build structures that big "instantaneously". All it can tube is build small tubes (fulgarites). About the ONLY things that can build mountains "instantaneously" are asteroid/comet/meteorite hits and volcanoes and even then, they aren't instantaneous.
Quite.
I dismissed your link because it was directing me to NOVA. My nephew gave me about fifty episodes not long ago. I watched one for maybe twenty minutes or until the background music drove home the consumer nature of the product. I don't do science and music together unless the science is music. You have a lot of faith in the scientific establishment. There's nothing wrong with that. It will just make the realizations all the more pointy. That's if you become a skeptic. Plasma etching and deposition are industrial realities on the human scale as they most certainly are on the cosmic scale. If your crater is round its been cut by an arc, period, nothing but that can strike at ninety degrees, not even a bullet. The lobotomy crack was a joke I didn't expect to see scars. I apologize. Maybe when you recover we can be frens.
Since the Enlightenment, people have made a fairly rigid distinction between ideas about the cosmos as formulated by individual thinkers, on a rational basis, and those as expressed collectively by entire peoples, typically rooted in folk memory. The former are labelled science,
theory of nature or
cosmology, the latter
traditional cosmology or
mythology. The theoretical difference between scientific and traditional paradigms of the cosmos certainly cannot be overemphasised.
Whereas the former continuously reinvent themselves in response to the latest insights, the latter are conservative by nature. The former fundamentally look forward as they evolve, the latter look backward as they decay. And whereas the former do not tolerate logical inconsistencies, the latter happily admit them.
Nevertheless, it is equally paramount to recognise the ultimate continuity between concepts that circulate between traditional lore and science. The collection of ideas about the cosmos, whether scholarly or popular, deserves a single denominator, as the same subject matter is involved. With the possible exception of
cosmovision, an expression thriving especially in the Spanish-speaking world, cosmology really presents itself as the most suitable term for any sets of ideas about the world.
Modern cosmology, taking its earliest beginnings in the proto-scientific speculations of Greek philosophers, contrasts with traditional cosmology as it has prevailed among people through all ages and cultures.
http://www.thunderbolts.info/wp/2011/12/28/traditions-of-science/