I thought I knew the story of the "lost world" off the east coast of Britain, inhabited by Mesolithic people until rising sea waters engulfed it around 8,000 years ago...
What follows is my imperfect grasp of things. Imperfect because I'm just an enthusiast who likes science - and also imperfect because, excitingly, *the work is happening right now*, in one of the greatest prehistoric archaeological investigations in history.
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One September night in 1931, the British vessel Colinda hauled up its nets 25 miles off the Norfolk coast - and found something beautiful & deadly.
Embedded in a lump of peat was this 8.5 inch prehistoric harpoon, carved from bone or antler...
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The harpoon was radiocarbon dated in 1988 to around 11,950–11,300 BC.
Pollen from samples dredged up by the same trawler suggested ancient mixed woodland.
At one time, there was land down there - and it seemed to be inhabited.
Doggerland must have seemed like a paradise compared to the starker uplands: food from the coast, food from rivers, deer, wild boar, berries, birds, otters, beavers...
Sure, the sea seemed to be creeping inland a bit more ever year, but hey - let future folk sort it out!
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Generation after generation, Doggerland was nibbled away by the rising North Sea.
Did Mesolithic people have stories about times when life was easier? Who knows.
But there certainly wasn't any ignoring what happened next.
And for many Mesolithic people, I'm sure it was.
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Eventually the floodwaters receded. This wasn't rapid sea-level rise. What really did in Doggerland was the creep of climate change - and it took thousands of years.
But if you were living here at this time, the tsunami must have been horrifying beyond belief. Words fail.
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Now Doggerland is faced with a different threat: the race for clean energy (newly accelerated by certain geopolitical factors).
Necessary and important work! Bring it on. But - do it *carefully*:
And of course, this story is timely in ways it really shouldn't be. As we look back, we're also looking forward - to one of the great global challenges of the 21st Century & beyond.
And if this whole flooded-archaeology thing makes your heart beat faster, please enjoy this taster on the lost (but perhaps *just* about to be rediscovered) medieval port of Ravenser Odd, courtesy of @FlorenceHRScott:
So I got curious. What else don't I know about these amazing things?
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Firstly: they're not just green.
Different heights of our atmosphere = different gases, & when charged particles from the sun excite gases at different altitudes, you get different colours.
*Wildly* different. Blue, pink, purple, yellow and (rarely) red.
I had no idea.
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Secondly: here's a weird thing discovered during an aurora above British Columbia:
"The temperature 300km above Earth’s surface jumped by 3000°C and the data revealed a 25 km-wide ribbon of gas flowing westwards..."
It's common for writers under terrifying deadline pressure to rely a bit too much on Wikipedia? Ahem. Easily done. It can't be TOO far wrong?
But a few months ago, researching a newsletter, I learned just how disastrous this can be.
An alarming 🧵 with good, hard LOLs:
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I'm old enough to remember t'days before t'Internet (black & white, everyone walked really fast, piano music etc) so I can emphatically say I love Wikipedia.
An encyclopedia edited by nearly 200,000 people - and it's *readable*? (And democratic?)
I'm a fan.
But...
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OK.
Have you heard of the Bicholim conflict?
It's an obscure 17th-Century war that raged between the Portuguese rulers of Goa, western India, and the neighbouring Maratha Empire.
Don't look for it on Wikipedia, though. It's not there.
...and all the examples I found are delightful, ludicrous and worrying! (It's amazing how completely it hijacks our mind.)
I dare you to unsee the following examples.
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In 1994, Diana Duyser of Florida spotted...something in her grilled cheese sandwich (the "Holy Toast").
She immediately did what any of us would do: packed it in cotton wool & waited for eBay to be invented, so she could auction it to online casino Golden Palace for $28,000.
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If you’re wondering how it didn’t evolve into an entirely new lifeform during that 10-year wait, here’s some science about how a grilled cheese sandwich can last a decade without going moldy, via @Slate: