Megacraters on Earth

Introduction to Cosmic Geology

by James M. McCampbell


Formats

Softcover
£12.51
Softcover
£12.51

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 02/02/2004

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 8.25x11
Page Count : 296
ISBN : 9781410777089

About the Book

This book describes the history of earth for at least 250 million years. Evidence is found in newly-discovered craters up to 3640 miles in diameter.  More than 200 have been cataloged.  Comets appear to have exploded at high altitudes in contrast to the familiar craters from impacting asteroids.  The first chapter describes and illustrates every region on the globe.  These explosions closed all the geological eras, repeatedly reset the clock of evolution, and started lava flows.  Major cracks in bedrock became mid-ocean ridges, leading to the present location of the continents.  Overthrusting of stretched bedrock during rebound created subduction trenches down which ocean floor is lost under island arcs.  Geographical features of the modern world reveal the craters.  Evidence includes mountain ranges, earthquakes, volcanoes, rivers, seas, and islands of every kind.  In refilling the great basins, mineral-laden, rock formations at great depth were brought closer to the surface within reach of existing, mining technology.  Locations of all oil fields are explained along with a new method for enhanced prospecting.  The explosions have provided humanity with all ingredients required for civilization. One of them, 65 millions years ago, opened the gate for mammals allowing development of mankind.


About the Author

Mr. McCampbell earned a degree in Engineering Physics at the University of California, Berkeley. After graduate studies, his professional specialties were focused upon the effects of nuclear weapons and design of nuclear reactors. He was an early user of large computers for solving technical and economic problems.  Later management assignments included a wide variety of projects.  Examples are engineering designs for the Space Environment Simulator at the L.B. Johnson Manned Spacecraft Center at Houston and the Fast Flux Test Facility (plutonium fueled reactor) for the Atomic Energy Commission at Hanford, Washington. Other key responsibilities supported the Bay Area Rapid Transit System, Master Plans for Air Force research centers, economic development of third-world countries, and Environmental Protection for the Alaskan Pipeline