Earth’s surface triangles not in ET category: sinks to meteor strikes

 Above meteor crater to Stoneman Lake, to Sunset volcano crater of thousand year age makes a triangle that’s not equilateral; it has clues for further understanding of how dark Energy directs placement of meteor strikes. Below is a literature photo of this crater near Flagstaff, Arizona:

Meteor crater above is a 50-60 thousand year age sink which occurs in Arizona near Williams; Stoneman Lake is shown below:


Sunset crater is an outlier of the Flagstaff’s San Francisco’s volcanic field- which has continued since Mogollon rim time.

Since above anomaly has a sink, a Crater, and a strike, I will use the Sand Mountain edge which has a Black Hole and another anomaly to replicate the feature (hiked finding the following feature):
Black hole- faulted- above was found in the Sand Hollow wash, and the clean round hole led to a spring in the valley; it’s now covered by the SHLake, below:
 “Big picture” of the triangular connection is shown below, and replicated by 167 km perimeter, compared to 177 km for the rare Sunset and Meteor craters:
How is it that a 50,000 year strike could be associated with a thousand year old crater?
Conclusions:1. Earth’s surface is moving askance with the underlying mantle and core! Milankovitch’s Ellipticity and wobbles are pertinent to the 95 percent core and mantle, but the crust moves in response to strikes and other Space masses. Above Lake Stoneman sunk when a meteor struck nearby;
2.  Outlier Sunset crater was heated, and further stimulated as time progressed;
Dark energy connects Gravitational mass and Geometry to effectuate the Earth’s polygons;
3. Mass displaced, as with meteor crater must rise somewhere else-as with Sunset volcano;
4. Lake Stoneman is about the same age as Meteor crater-50,000 years old; and 
5. Perimeter of features’ is proportional to the geological age.  

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Our Moon- though Tidally locked- has Libration, Asteroid strikes, and moves away 38 mm/year

Galapagos is key to our Earth-Moon dynamics

Mt. St. Helens (1980) 40 years later