Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#7
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Chuck Gould writes:
Undoubtedly you entirely missed the comment in my original post where I theorized that the NW Passage must have been commonly open during some periods of time prior to the 16 & 17 century expeditions that were sent to look for it. (Most rumors have at least some basis in fact, and stories of passage across the top of North America had to be common enough and convincing enough that huge sums of money and resources would be engaged to try to find and confirm it). If you missed that, you also missed my comment that a period warm enough to remove ice from the NW Passage 500 years or more ago could not have been caused by the internal combustion engine. 500 years ago it was pretty cold. The last Viking colonies on Greenland gave up in the 1400s due to cold climate. Surviving winter in Europe was a big struggle for most Europeans. 17 century saw the Baltic ice covered on a regular basis and very bad times in Chine due to low crop yields. If you look for a warm era look at the 18th century (Carl von Linné moved out from down town Uppsala because he was worried about malaria. Malaria was brought to what would later be the USA by English settlers.) or a thousand years ago when harbours had to be re-built time again due to rising sea levels---even here where the land is rising by 5 mm/year as a result of missing ice of the latest ice-age. -- Martin Schöön "Problems worthy of attack show their worth by hitting back." Piet Hein |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Northwest passage | Cruising | |||
Passage from Med to Maldives | ASA | |||
Passage from Med to Maldives | Cruising | |||
NW Passage | ASA | |||
NW Passage opening up | ASA |