Blow me down. It’s not just Africa. India is also breaking apart – see https://dailygalaxy.com/2025/05/india-breaking-apart-continental-fracture/ … a geological study, published in the AGU journal [American Geophysical Union] says India seem to be splitting apart. The study is backed up by seismic data [earthquake waves] and isotopic analysis [helium isotopic ratios]. This is due to Plate Tectonics, we are told. The lower part of the Indian plate is peeling away and sinking into the mantle. How do they know this? It seems helium 3 is found in the mantle – but now they have discovered it might also be in the crust in Bhutan, between India and Tibet. They have decided the plate allowed this to happen so some of it must be missing. Allowing helium 3 to upwell. The after thought is added – we don’t know how continents could behave this way.
One might add, tongue in cheek. The proposed plate tear is aligned to a known surface rift formation. This is the Gona-Sagri Rift in Tibet. A rupture or geological fault system. We are then told the study took place in Bhutan – nestling in the lower Himalayas on the Indian side of the mountains. Have they really got a handle on what is happening?
At https://dailygalaxy.com/2025/05/baby-mammoth-frozen-discovered/ … we’ve been here before with Velikovsky’s Earth in Upheaval book but a new generation and a new source of wonder. The baby mammoth is described as remarkably preserved, an almost complete carcass. It was found during gold mining excavations at Eureka Creek in the Yukon.
The gold beds in the rivers and streams of this part of the Yukon are covered in what is described as muck deposits. These are the result of successive waves of water running upstream pushing a melee of trees and vegetation, as well as animals, and depositing them in great heaps, mixed up with ice. Early geologists who described this were villified by desk bound uniformitarian academic geologists in the late 19th/early 20th century. However, modern gold mining operations have to remove these heaps of muck in order to reach the creek beds – where they hope to find gold nuggets. Every now and again a carcass is found more intact then most. Actually, the bones are mainly disarticulated, broken and crushed by being part of a tsunami wave. Similarities exist with the bone beds of dinsaurs in various parts of the world. Water can be extraordinarily destructive.