(ORDO NEWS) — Was there a catastrophic flood that engulfed much of the Sahara? And what does this tell us about our history?
The Sahara is shrouded in mystery. Not only because it is a huge area that has changed dramatically over thousands of years, but also because it contains numerous amazing features that defy explanation.
With an area of 9.2 million square kilometers, the Sahara is the largest “hot” desert on Earth and the third largest desert after Antarctica and the Arctic. Its name comes from the Arabic word for desert – Sahara.
Due to its size, the Sahara occupies part of the territory of such countries as Algeria, Chad, Mali, Morocco, Souda, Tunisia, Egypt, Niger, etc.
Not many people are willing to admit the idea, let alone say, that there is evidence of a giant wave of water swept across the Sahara. But, it really happened.
A catastrophic flood once swept through the Sahara, and it was so great that the evidence left behind by it can be easily determined by looking at satellite images.
What’s more, you don’t even have to be an expert to see these signs. Because they are so obvious.
And while this idea certainly deserves further study, no one in the academic scientific community is willing to study or discuss it. Why?
According to Bright Insight (on video), because everything we’ve been taught about the history of climate change on our planet contradicts the idea of a catastrophic flooding of the Sahara.
The apparent flood marks in the Sahara may indeed point to a possible massive flood in the not so distant geological past.
One of these finds is a huge amount of salts that have settled on the terrestrial bedrock of the Sahara.
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