• DocumentCode
    2010749
  • Title

    The origin of petroglyphs-recordings of a catastrophic aurora in human prehistory?

  • Author

    Scott, D. ; Peratt

  • Author_Institution
    Los Alamos Nat. Lab., NM, USA
  • fYear
    2003
  • fDate
    5-5 June 2003
  • Firstpage
    143
  • Abstract
    Summary form only given, as follows. Petroglyphs are images created on rock by means of carving or ´pecking´ the outer surface to expose the surface underneath They are found on all continents except Antarctica. The purpose of this paper is an attempt to explain how in man´s prehistory recordings of high-energy-density phenomena (some not experimentally recorded until the last few years) could have been carved on rock in an accurate, systematic and apparently temporally accurate fashion. Based on the compilation and analysis of the order of 50,000 digitally recorded petroglyphs, we have identified several dozen general categories of instabilities whose morphology is that of a highly nonlinear pinched plasma column generally associated with multi-mega-ampere Z-pinch experiments. We shall present the direct comparison of the temporal evolution of experimental instabilities with petroglyphs, indicating that nearly all archaic carvings match the phenomena that ought be produced in an intense and long-lasting aurora.
  • Keywords
    astroarchaeology; aurora; aurora; human prehistory; petroglyphs; Australia; Continents; Electron beams; Humans; Laboratories; Natural languages; Plasmas; Rivers; Surface morphology;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Plasma Science, 2003. ICOPS 2003. IEEE Conference Record - Abstracts. The 30th International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Jeju, South Korea
  • ISSN
    0730-9244
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-7911-X
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/PLASMA.2003.1228571
  • Filename
    1228571