Tuesday, January 23, 2024

A Massive Tsunami Could Have Wiped Out Populations in Stone Age Britain

NATURE
By JENNY MCGRATH, BUSINESS INSIDER

 

The rocky coastline of Howick, England, at sunrise. (Craig Richards/Getty Images)


About 8,200 years ago, an underwater landslide known as the Storegga slide near Norway triggered a tsunami that engulfed parts of northern Europe.

Around the same time, there was a massive dip in Britain's population.

Researchers at the University of York and the University of Leeds looked at whether the disaster contributed to the population decline, or if other factors were at play.

"The suggested population decline occurred immediately after the Storegga tsunami occurred," Patrick Sharrocks, the lead author on the paper detailing the research, told Business Insider via email. "However, a cold period coincided with the tsunami so it was unclear which event had a greater impact."

The researchers built computer simulations of how far the tsunami's waves could have reached inland.

Based on their results, the researchers concluded that the tsunami could have wiped out a significant portion of the population at Howick, Northumberland in northern England.

They recently published their findings in the peer-reviewed Journal of Quaternary Science.

65-foot waves slammed the Shetland Islands

When the landslides triggered the massive waves, they had widespread impacts. Evidence of the Storegga tsunami has been found in Norway, England, Denmark, Greenland, and Scotland, including the Shetland Islands.

Around the mainland of the UK, waves may have reached 10 to 20 feet. Off the coast of Scotland, the Shetland Islands' narrow valleys may have magnified the effects, causing waves of over 65 feet to flood the land.

There aren't written records of the disaster. Instead, the story is in the sediment deposits from lakes, lagoons, and other bodies of water that formed during the tsunami. The wave eroded sediment on land but also brought in more from the sea.

While these layers are distinctive, they often erode with time and human activity. However, they can give scientists clues about how far inland a wave traveled and how often similar events occurred.

Present-day Howick, England, where a tsunami may have hit over 8,000 years ago. (Craig Richards/Getty Images)
People camping on a rugged section of the coast near Howick, Northumberland Coast Path, Northumberland, England. August 8, 2018. (Marc Guitard/Getty Images)

It's possible the huge waves didn't reach Howick at all. The location has sediment that seems to be the result of a sudden event. Yet it's coarser than the finer sand found elsewhere attributed to the Storegga waves.

"Further sedimentary research at Howick could accurately identify whether deposits were produced by the tsunami at this location," Sharrocks said.

A population unprepared for a tsunami

Tsunamis are rare in the British Isles. The Mesolithic population likely never experienced one before the Storegga landslide, according to the study.

The researchers speculate that the receding sea that precedes a giant wave may have drawn people to the water to collect stranded shellfish.

If that happened, the tsunami could have drowned a significant percentage of the population. The destruction of resources, like hazel trees, could have also led to famine among survivors.

Numerical models "can reconstruct the Storegga tsunami but can never be fully representative of past events," Sharrocks said. The event was so long ago that there was a lot of uncertainty around the relative sea level position, topography, and elevation at the time.

According to the researchers' models, only if the tsunami hit at high tide would it have affected Howick.

In another paper from 2021, researchers suggested the tsunami may have destroyed evidence of human habitation in Norway, Britain, and other regions. But they also noted that "there remain very few archaeological sites with direct evidence of tsunami deposits," which makes it difficult to assess "the extent to which this event was a disaster for the coastal communities."

Future British tsunamis

For years, scientists thought the Storegga tsunami was a unique event. Recent research, however, found tsunamis hit Shetland 5,000 and 1,500 years ago.

That frequency means another one isn't out of the question.

"It means that the hazard, the risk, is far more serious than we thought previously," Dave Tappin of the British Geological Survey told the BBC in 2018.

That's why it's important to understand disasters from the past, even prehistoric ones.

"Identifying and assessing the magnitude of similar precursor events can help predict where, when, and how large future events may be in a certain area," Sharrocks said.

DOJ Calls Police Response to Uvalde Shooting a ‘Failure’

By Tariro Mzezewa, the Cut's morning blogger.

Photo: MARK FELIX/AFP /AFP via Getty Images

A new report by the Department of Justice concludes that lives could have been saved had police responded more quickly to the 2022 mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, which left 19 children and two teachers dead. The scathing 575-page report, which was delivered by Attorney General Merrick Garland in Uvalde on Thursday, blames police for “cascading failures” in their response to the massacre.

On the morning of May 24, Salvador Ramos, 18, walked into Robb Elementary with an AR-15 and opened fire in a fourth-grade classroom, killing 21 people. Seventy-seven minutes later, Ramos was killed by a U.S. Border Patrol agent — not local or state police, sparking outrage about why police didn’t act faster. Following the shooting, state police blamed local police for the slow response; but soon after, it was revealed that state police who were also at the scene failed to confront the gunman.

“Had law enforcement agencies followed generally accepted practices in an active-shooter situation and gone right after the shooter to stop him, lives would have been saved and people would have survived,” Garland told reporters and families. The report outlines failures in leadership and communication, saying the Uvalde Police Department, the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District, the Uvalde County Sheriff’s Office, and the Texas Department of Public Safety “demonstrated no urgency for establishing a command and control structure, which led to challenges related to information sharing, lack of situational statuses, and limited-to-no direction for personnel in the hallway or on the perimeter.”

Thursday’s DOJ report found that local police who got to the school within minutes of the shooting intended to enter the school but were instructed by their chief, Pete Arredondo, not to. His decisions, including attempts to negotiate with the shooter, the report says, slowed down the response. “The most significant failure was that responding officers should have immediately recognized the incident as an active-shooter situation” and done everything they could to enter the classrooms.

Most of the officials who were working on the day of the shooting have retired or been fired, but no criminal charges have been pressed against them. Thursday’s report led families of the victims to once again call for accountability. “I’m very surprised that no one has ended up in prison,” Velma Lisa Duran, whose sister Irma Garcia was one of the two teachers killed in the shooting, told the Associated Press. “It’s sort of a slap in the face that all we get is a review … we deserve justice.”

Following the report, President Biden issued a statement acknowledging that “There were multiple points of failure that hold lessons for the future” and calling for tighter gun-control laws. “We need universal background checks, we need a national red-flag law, and we must ban assault weapons and high-capacity magazines,” he said. “The families of Uvalde — and all American communities — deserve nothing less.”
Guardian’s ‘Hamas Mass Rape’ Story Doesn’t Add Up

Jonathan Cook addresses the latest in a continuous cycle of stories about the events of Oct. 7.


The Guardian building in London, 2012. (Bryantbob, CC BY-SA 3.0, Wikimedia Commons)

By Jonathan Cook
January 21, 2024
Jonathan-Cook.net

T
he Guardian has just published the latest in the Western media’s endless cycle of stories claiming Hamas committed “systematic, mass rape” on Oct. 7.

Its article is headlined: “Evidence points to systematic use of rape and sexual violence by Hamas in 7 October attacks.”

The biggest problem with these stories isn’t just the continuing absence of any meaningful evidence for “systematic” rape; or Israel’s long track record of lying to justify state terrorism; or Israel’s refusal to cooperate with independent investigators; or the racist, anti-Arab tropes that pass for sophisticated analysis in western circles.

It is simply the outrageous improbability of so many of the evidence-poor rape stories being advanced.

The Guardian recycles a supposed eyewitness account of a group of Hamas fighters taking turns to rape a woman at the Nova festival on Oct. 7, then cutting off her breast to play a football-like game with it at the side of the road.

We are supposed to believe this happened when we also know – from facts provided by the Israeli media – that Hamas stumbled on to the Nova festival totally unprepared and on their way to what they assumed would be a major confrontation with the Israeli military at a nearby army base; that its fighters were quickly confronted by paramilitary Israeli police who engaged them in gun battles; and that Israeli Apache helicopters, with little intelligence to work on, were firing Hellfire missiles at anything that moved, based on the “Hannibal directive” to prevent hostage-taking at all costs.

Does any of that add up? Did Hamas’ most disciplined elite fighters – training for years and knowing that this might be their their only, brief moment to take on the Israeli army in a near-fair fight or drag hostages back to Gaza for a prisoner swap before the Israeli military used its air power to overwhelm them – really take time out to indulge in a sick game involving a woman’s breast?

How is it that no one – The Guardian reporter, her section editors, the paper’s editors – stopped for a moment and thought “Is this really plausible?” and “Am I being played to advance a nefarious agenda?” — in this case, genocide.

Or did they simply recite in their minds — as Israel knew they would — “Believe women!”, especially if they are confirming a racist assumption that Arab men are blood-thirsty, sex-obsessed primitives.

Sourcing


ZAKA volunteers in Be’eri kibbutz in October 2023.
 (Tomer Persico, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0)

In fact, the Zaka volunteers who are being heavily relied on in this Guardian “report” are Jewish religious extremist men, also with a proven record of lying: they came up with the complete fabrication of “40 beheaded babies” when no babies were beheaded. Two infants are recorded dying that day.

The woman leading the “Hamas mass rape” campaign — now an academic – is a former spokesperson for the Israeli military. Their job, as any honest reporter will tell you, is to lie to journalists to excuse Israel’s incessant war crimes.

What we now know — from multiple credible Israeli sources – is that Israel killed lots of its own civilians on Oct. 7.

Ynet, Israel’s biggest media outlet, has just published an investigation in Hebrew showing that Hamas successfully took out Israel’s all-seeing drone “eyes” over Gaza that day, leaving the Israeli military blind about what was happening.

Panicked, Israeli commanders invoked the Hannibal directive, allowing those in the field to order tanks and helicopters to fire at anything that moved.

It was Israel that incinerated the hundreds of cars trying to flee the Nova festival, killing potentially hundreds of the 1,140 Israeli civilians that died that day, as well as Hamas fighters.

It was an Israeli tank that incinerated 13 Israeli civilians, and 40 Hamas fighters, holed up in a house in Kibbutz Be’eri by blasting a shell through its front wall.

Israel, of course, wants no one, least of all the Western media, talking about any of that. What it needs instead is anything that will help to distract from its crimes against its citizens and justify its committing of genocide against the people of Gaza.

So it has every reason to serve up the “Hamas mass rape” story, feeding what it rightly assumes are the Islamophobic prejudices of most Israeli Jews and Western reporters.

Journalists at The Guardian, the BBC and the rest of the establishment media are paid to play their role in regurgitating these lies to advance Western foreign policy goals. You are not. So please hold on to your humanity — and refuse to play along with Israel and the media’s racist disinformation campaign.

I have written previously about the media’s peddling of deceptions about Oct. 7. You can find those articles at these links:  
 Jonathan Cook.net

Jonathan Cook is an award-winning British journalist. He was based in Nazareth, Israel, for 20 years. He returned to the U.K. in 2021.He is the author of three books on the Israel-Palestine conflict: Blood and Religion: The Unmasking of the Jewish State (2006), Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle East (2008) and Disappearing Palestine: Israel’s Experiments in Human Despair (2008).

The views expressed are solely those of the author and may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.