OT/MISC Sodom and Gomorrah: Researchers May Have Found Evidence of God's Wrath in Middle Eastern City

Countrymouse

Country exile in the city
The foundational research document which is referenced was published in some journal named The Conversation and is an interesting read. I bolded and underlined some discussion at the very end of the article regarding the present situation of earth with asteroids and such. Food for thought and all that:

A giant space rock demolished an ancient Middle Eastern city and everyone in it – possibly inspiring the Biblical story of Sodom

A giant space rock demolished an ancient Middle Eastern city and everyone in it – possibly inspiring the Biblical story of Sodom
September 20, 2021 6.48am EDT
Author
  1. Christopher R. Moore
    Archaeologist and Special Projects Director at the Savannah River Archaeological Research Program and South Carolina Institute for Archaeology and Anthropology, University of South Carolina
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Christopher R. Moore does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
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Artist's rendition of ancient buildings made of mudbricks with explosion in sky's rendition of ancient buildings made of mudbricks with explosion in sky

Artist’s evidence-based depiction of the blast, which had the power of 1,000 Hiroshimas. Allen West and Jennifer Rice, CC BY-ND
As the inhabitants of an ancient Middle Eastern city now called Tall el-Hammam went about their daily business one day about 3,600 years ago, they had no idea an unseen icy space rock was speeding toward them at about 38,000 mph (61,000 kph).
Flashing through the atmosphere, the rock exploded in a massive fireball about 2.5 miles (4 kilometers) above the ground. The blast was around 1,000 times more powerful than the Hiroshima atomic bomb. The shocked city dwellers who stared at it were blinded instantly. Air temperatures rapidly rose above 3,600 degrees Fahrenheit (2,000 degrees Celsius). Clothing and wood immediately burst into flames. Swords, spears, mudbricks and pottery began to melt. Almost immediately, the entire city was on fire.
Some seconds later, a massive shockwave smashed into the city. Moving at about 740 mph (1,200 kph), it was more powerful than the worst tornado ever recorded. The deadly winds ripped through the city, demolishing every building. They sheared off the top 40 feet (12 m) of the 4-story palace and blew the jumbled debris into the next valley. None of the 8,000 people or any animals within the city survived – their bodies were torn apart and their bones blasted into small fragments.
About a minute later, 14 miles (22 km) to the west of Tall el-Hammam, winds from the blast hit the biblical city of Jericho. Jericho’s walls came tumbling down and the city burned to the ground.
How The Conversation is different: We explain without oversimplifying.
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It all sounds like the climax of an edge-of-your-seat Hollywood disaster movie. How do we know that all of this actually happened near the Dead Sea in Jordan millennia ago?
Satellite image showing the area with Tall el-Hammam about 7 miles (12 kilometers) northeast of the Dead Sea
Now called Tall el-Hammam, the city is located about 7 miles northeast of the Dead Sea in what is now Jordan. NASA, CC BY-ND
Getting answers required nearly 15 years of painstaking excavations by hundreds of people. It also involved detailed analyses of excavated material by more than two dozen scientists in 10 states in the U.S., as well as Canada and the Czech Republic. When our group finally published the evidence recently in the journal Scientific Reports, the 21 co-authors included archaeologists, geologists, geochemists, geomorphologists, mineralogists, paleobotanists, sedimentologists, cosmic-impact experts and medical doctors.
Here’s how we built up this picture of devastation in the past.
Firestorm throughout the city
Years ago, when archaeologists looked out over excavations of the ruined city, they could see a dark, roughly 5-foot-thick (1.5 m) jumbled layer of charcoal, ash, melted mudbricks and melted pottery. It was obvious that an intense firestorm had destroyed this city long ago. This dark band came to be called the destruction layer.
Excavators stand in a dry landscape with ruins of ancient walls
Researchers stand near the ruins of ancient walls, with the destruction layer about midway down each exposed wall. Phil Silvia, CC BY-ND
No one was exactly sure what had happened, but that layer wasn’t caused by a volcano, earthquake or warfare. None of them are capable of melting metal, mudbricks and pottery.
To figure out what could, our group used the Online Impact Calculator to model scenarios that fit the evidence. Built by impact experts, this calculator allows researchers to estimate the many details of a cosmic impact event, based on known impact events and nuclear detonations.
It appears that the culprit at Tall el-Hammam was a small asteroid similar to the one that knocked down 80 million trees in Tunguska, Russia in 1908. It would have been a much smaller version of the giant miles-wide rock that pushed the dinosaurs into extinction 65 million ago.
We had a likely culprit. Now we needed proof of what happened that day at Tall el-Hammam.
Finding ‘diamonds’ in the dirt
Our research revealed a remarkably broad array of evidence.
magnified images of tiny quartz grains
Electron microscope images of numerous small cracks in shocked quartz grains. Allen West, CC BY-ND
At the site, there are finely fractured sand grains called shocked quartz that only form at 725,000 pounds per square inch of pressure (5 gigapascals) – imagine six 68-ton Abrams military tanks stacked on your thumb.
The destruction layer also contains tiny diamonoids that, as the name indicates, are as hard as diamonds. Each one is smaller than a flu virus. It appears that wood and plants in the area were instantly turned into this diamond-like material by the fireball’s high pressures and temperatures.

Diamonoids (center) inside a crater were formed by the fireball’s high temperatures and pressures on wood and plants. Malcolm LeCompte, CC BY-ND
Experiments with laboratory furnaces showed that the bubbled pottery and mudbricks at Tall el-Hammam liquefied at temperatures above 2,700 F (1,500 C). That’s hot enough to melt an automobile within minutes.
magnified view of spherical shapes
Spherules made of melted sand (upper left), palace plaster (upper right) and melted metal (bottom two). Malcolm LeCompte, CC BY-ND
The destruction layer also contains tiny balls of melted material smaller than airborne dust particles. Called spherules, they are made of vaporized iron and sand that melted at about 2,900 F (1,590 C).
In addition, the surfaces of the pottery and meltglass are speckled with tiny melted metallic grains, including iridium with a melting point of 4,435 F (2,466 C), platinum that melts at 3,215 F (1,768 C) and zirconium silicate at 2,800 F (1,540 C).
Together, all this evidence shows that temperatures in the city rose higher than those of volcanoes, warfare and normal city fires. The only natural process left is a cosmic impact.
The same evidence is found at known impact sites, such as Tunguska and the Chicxulub crater, created by the asteroid that triggered the dinosaur extinction.
One remaining puzzle is why the city and over 100 other area settlements were abandoned for several centuries after this devastation. It may be that high levels of salt deposited during the impact event made it impossible to grow crops. We’re not certain yet, but we think the explosion may have vaporized or splashed toxic levels of Dead Sea salt water across the valley. Without crops, no one could live in the valley for up to 600 years, until the minimal rainfall in this desert-like climate washed the salt out of the fields.
Was there a surviving eyewitness to the blast?
It’s possible that an oral description of the city’s destruction may have been handed down for generations until it was recorded as the story of Biblical Sodom. The Bible describes the devastation of an urban center near the Dead Sea – stones and fire fell from the sky, more than one city was destroyed, thick smoke rose from the fires and city inhabitants were killed.
Could this be an ancient eyewitness account? If so, the destruction of Tall el-Hammam may be the second-oldest destruction of a human settlement by a cosmic impact event, after the village of Abu Hureyra in Syria about 12,800 years ago. Importantly, it may the first written record of such a catastrophic event.
[Over 110,000 readers rely on The Conversation’s newsletter to understand the world. Sign up today.]
The scary thing is, it almost certainly won’t be the last time a human city meets this fate.
imagesasteroid20180723main-animation-16.width-1320.gif
Animation depicting the positions of known near-Earth objects at points in time for the 20 years ending in January 2018. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Tunguska-sized airbursts, such as the one that occurred at Tall el-Hammam, can devastate entire cities and regions, and they pose a severe modern-day hazard. As of September 2021, there are more than 26,000 known near-Earth asteroids and a hundred short-period near-Earth comets. One will inevitably crash into the Earth. Millions more remain undetected, and some may be headed toward the Earth now.

Unless orbiting or ground-based telescopes detect these rogue objects, the world may have no warning, just like the people of Tall el-Hammam.
This article was co-authored by research collaborators archaeologist Phil Silvia, geophysicist Allen West, geologist Ted Bunch and space physicist Malcolm LeCompte.

Cool stuff. You can purchase brimstone on ebay. Around $100ea. 98% purse sulfur, found nowhere on Earth.

Next most pure sulfur is in New Zealand at 58% or so. I forget the actual numbers. Where these stones came from is at the location of the three cities.

The stones still burns blue today. Walk right up and light it on fire. There are millions of them.

I watched dozens of these documentaries the following does a good job convincing
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FwTVFk1HK3Y

Thing is--

the group who wrote the book and that is referenced in the OP

and the man in the video about the brimstone--


are contradicting one another.

As the OP article tells it, Tel-El Hammam is at the NORTH end of the Dead Sea---

but the guy in the video says it's at the SOUTH end.........



:shr:
 

Cag3db1rd

Paranoid Pagan
Well, definitely not needing to get into an wxistential argument this morning since all of us on this thread agree there is a god. We wouldn't be on this thread to poke our fingers at each other, and screech, "See? This proves..." I love it when ppl can agree.
 

Walrus

Veteran Member
Thing is--

the group who wrote the book and that is referenced in the OP

and the man in the video about the brimstone--


are contradicting one another.

As the OP article tells it, Tel-El Hammam is at the NORTH end of the Dead Sea---

but the guy in the video says it's at the SOUTH end.........



:shr:
Details, details, eh? :gaah:
 

Rex Jackson

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Thing is--

the group who wrote the book and that is referenced in the OP

and the man in the video about the brimstone--


are contradicting one another.

As the OP article tells it, Tel-El Hammam is at the NORTH end of the Dead Sea---

but the guy in the video says it's at the SOUTH end.........



:shr:
Been years since I watched these documentaries but I remember a plane fly-over that located the cities. The ruins looked white from the air
 

Cardinal

Chickministrator
_______________
Actually---YES, they did.

Don't know about the "pillar" part (maybe by facing the blast, she got a greater exposure to it somehow?) BUT-

the article DID have an explanation for the SALT:

One remaining puzzle is why the city and over 100 other area settlements were abandoned for several centuries after this devastation. It may be that high levels of salt deposited during the impact event made it impossible to grow crops. We’re not certain yet, but we think the explosion may have vaporized or splashed toxic levels of Dead Sea salt water across the valley.
That explains Lots wife then. She lingered too long and was caught in the blast.
 

Knoxville's Joker

Has No Life - Lives on TB
That explains Lots wife then. She lingered too long and was caught in the blast.

Let us think here for a minute. She lingered too long. The heat evaporates water but not salt. The salt basically kills her as it is at terminal velocities. We are 70% water. So yes a pillar of salt could be a very simplified explanation for watching the whole process from affar.
 

Dobbin

Faithful Steed
Trinitite


So the lopsided marbles and the knobbly sheets became Trinitite. It was primarily quartz and feldspar, tinted sea green with minerals in the desert sand, with droplets of condensed plutonium sealed into it. Once the site was opened, after the war, collectors picked it up in chunks; local rock shops sold it and still do. Concerned for its residual radioactivity, the Army bulldozed the site in 1952 and made collecting Trinitite illegal. What’s sold today was collected before the ban. Unless you eat it, scientists report, it isn’t dangerous anymore.

Dobbin
 
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