The Gulf Of Mexico, The Unnatural Making Of An Inland Sea: Major Land Deformations Are Imminent On All Coasts Of The USA. Maps Will Have To Be Revised In Order To Reflect These Cataclysmic Changes, WAR-ning $ BeWAR3!!! SELAH
The Gulf Of Mexico, The Unnatural Making Of An Inland Sea: Major Land Deformations Are Imminent On All Coasts Of The USA. Maps Will Have To Be Revised In Order To Reflect These Cataclysmic Changes, WAR-ning $ BeWAR3!!! We Must All PREPARE NOW Before It’s Too Late Because Time Is Definitely Growing Short, Please Let’s All REPENT, HOSEA 2:16. SELAH
Please, Spread This Major Evacuation Notice Concerning All Low Lying-Low Topography Southern Regions Close To The Gulf Of Mexico And Mississippi River, Especially Louisiana: An Unnatural Flase Flag Nuclear Detonation Of The Fragile Cracker-Like Drill Hole Riddled Gulf Mexico Will Produce A Massive Fast Moving Toxic Mega-Tsunami, BeWAR3 $ WAR-ning!!! SELAH
By wakeupmypeoplespiritrain
As Foretold In Revelation 12th Ch., The Gulf Of Mexico Will Be Artificially Ruptured Via US Government Nukes Which Will Subsequently Set Off The New Madrid Fault Line That Rupture The Mississippi River Bed Thus Quickly Making It Become 200 To 300 Miles Wider As This Enormous Rift In The Earth Swallows Up These Toxic Tsunami Flood Ocean Waters, BeWAR3 $ WAR-ning!!! SELAH
By wakeupmypeoplespiritrain
Amazon.com: The Gulf: The Making of An American Sea (9780871408662): Jack E. Davis: Books
Amazon.com › Gulf-Making-American-…
Amazon.com: The Gulf: The Making of An American Sea ( 9780871408662): Jack E. Davis: Books. … A professor of environmental history at the University of Florida, he grew up on the Gulf coast, and now …
Former epicontinental seas in Earth’s history Edit
At various times in the geologic past, inland seas have been greater in extent and more common than at present.
- During the Oligocene and Early Miocene large swathes of Patagoniawere subject to a marine transgression. The transgression might have temporarily linked the Pacific and Atlantic oceans, as inferred from the findings of marine invertebrate fossils of both Atlantic and Pacific affinity in La Cascada Formation.[5][6] Connection would have occurred through narrow epicontinental seaways that formed channels in a dissected topography.[5][7]
- A vast inland sea, the Western Interior Seaway, extended from the Gulf of Mexico deep into present-day Canada during the Cretaceous.
- At the same time, much of the low plains of modern-day northern France and northern Germany were inundated by an inland sea, where the chalk was deposited that gave the Cretaceous Period its name.
- The Amazon, originally emptying into the Pacific, as South America rifted from Africa, found its exit blocked by the rise of the Andes about 15 million years ago. A great inland sea developed, at times draining north through what is now Venezuela before finding its present eastward outlet into the South Atlantic. Gradually this inland sea became a vast freshwater lake and wetlands where sediment flattened its profiles and the marine inhabitants adapted to life in freshwater. Over 20 species of stingray, most closely related to those found in the Pacific Ocean, can be found today in the freshwaters of the Amazon, which is also home to a freshwater dolphin. In 2005 fossilized remains of a giant crocodilian, estimated to have been 46 ft (14 m) in length, were discovered in the northern rainforest of Amazonian Peru.[8]
- In Australia, the Eromanga Sea existed during the Cretaceous Period. It covered large swaths of the eastern half of the continent