California used to be an island

California was mapped out as an island between the 1500s to the 1700s.
What event caused this? And what event made it not into an island anymore? Mud floods?
The history we have been told pre industrial revolution is far from the truth. Some disastrous event happened in that caused a huge reset. Where orphan cities were created and robber barons having to destroy evidence of ruins of tartaria. There is a history we have not been told. Seems like these resets are planned

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youtu.be/BRD8y4tl-30
youtu.be/h5PYLVmhxWs
searchworks.stanford.edu/catalog?f[collection][]=zb871zd0767
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sulphur-crested_cockatoo
youtube.com/watch?v=oJfBSc6e7QQ
youtu.be/acRFzipa7VQ
twitter.com/NSFWRedditGif

Self bump mods always slide threads that mention mud floods, tartaria, and the reset

California wasn’t an island back then.They just hadn’t mapped far enough north to realize that Baja California was a peninsula.

Baja blast

Alright keep believing the lies

No. Look at a damn map and you will see that island is in fact the baja california states in Mexico, a lack of distance traveled up the west coast coast would lead one to believe it is an island. It is not. It does not even represent the california most Jow Forums users would recognise.

Its called the sea of Cortez dumb fuck.

There's a lot else that's different about that map too

Too logical. Totally was an island

Nah that's the most plausible explanation desu

what about this map of the north pole

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>California was mapped out as an island between the 1500s to the 1700s.
Most of the oldest maps are forgeries.

They found Deception Pass and thought that was the connection to the Sea of Cortez.

>even though there is no record of tectonic movement anywhere close to the scale required to merge an island to mainland in ~100-200 years, California nevertheless broke all the records when no one was watching, because I say so!

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You know what's even crazier? This is a Chinese map from 1418.

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there was significantly more polar ice before the industrial revolution, so explorers coming across giant masses of ice in the Arctic mapped them as land-masses instead of masses of floating ice

maybe it's just an erroneous depiction of the baja peninsula

youtu.be/BRD8y4tl-30
youtu.be/h5PYLVmhxWs
Watch these faggot if you'd actually like to learn what I'm talking about. Worth taking a look even there is a small chance that you are wrong

Yes. California is that amazing. There's no doubt it was an island

>Believing Chinese history is true....

Here's a map collection for you
searchworks.stanford.edu/catalog?f[collection][]=zb871zd0767
Look at the landmarks.
Also tartaria is mapped in the majority of those maps. A kingdom that we are told is fiction

Pretty sure that is supposed to be baja california. The west coast wasnt as well mapped as the east coast. That's also why the midwest and great lake region look like shit as well, also according to this "map" canada is tiny and alaska is next to the continental US.

Frisia is also an Island for a couple of centuries.

but there are records of giant tectonic movement on that level?
and that's what all the science mans go on and on about it happening again and california floating away?
>shareblue_voidhead_retardedwojack17.jpg

>Pretty sure that is supposed to be baja california
Yes, but why believe it for two centuries?

They probably did not, so the oldest maps are fakes.

Maps showed ownership, so they were often faked.

Puget Sound actually does connect to the Sea of Cortez but nobody has found the route yet.

>falling for this b8
kys nupol

That's not crazy though, everybody knows the landbridge existed, and american natives are just russian/japs mongols.

Probably true, but why not label it as yours without making it an island on the map? Spain did own practically the entire west half of america at the time, it'd make more sense for them to include it as part of the mainland if they were trying to scam everybody else.

This. They didn't have Google Earth back then you zoomer fucks.

The San Joaquin valley was inundated many times before flood control was instituted.

If you'd like to learn more about what I'm talking about watch these. This guy explains it better than I will

wow its almost like the northern western coast wasnt explored yet and they just assumed baja cali was an island

Yes it was explored and they thought the Puget Sound was the way to get to the Sea of Cortez.

California was some legendary island, so when they found Baja, they were sure they had hit jackpot.

>Spain did own practically the entire west half of america at the time
And I bet they had two centuries of maps to prove it?

>and they just assumed baja cali was an island
They assumed Baja was the legendary Island California.

>what is Lewis and Clarke
>what is no one fully crossing the continent until the early 1800s
>what is maps reflecting geographic unknowns accordingly
You know the Byzantines thought there wasn't a set of continents past the Atlantic at all, right? Just China?

Pretty much?
Who else was even over there? Do you think the Netherlands was trying to colonize california?

cartographers used to just make shit up. They likely had no clue what was over there.

Spanish niggers saw the sea of Cortez and thought it went all the way up or something without checking

They didnt realize that baja California was a peninsula.

this

Reddit.com/r/tartarianarchitecture

>Do you think the Netherlands was trying to colonize california?
I don't know. What I find incredible stupid is the whole Columbus discovered America, since you have the name Newfoundland.

The Basques fished there in the 14th century, and the Norse also knew about it.

Why was this so important to hide?

IDK, but Spain owned the Netherlands for a while, and when they lost it after the 80 year war, they might have rewritten history.

The Spanish Empire also stopped being important after they lost the Netherlands, so one might think that the Dutch were the motor of the Spanish Empire.

it's weird shit for sure..

I found a university paper that was showing sulfur crested cockatoo's in a 13th century book that was in the vatican. Turns out Australia has been known about all along, I wonder what happened here to make them fully erase history. These birds are only found in Australia and PnG

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sulphur-crested_cockatoo

tl;dr;

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>13th century book that was in the vatican
The shitolic church are the biggest forgers out there, so the book might not really be from the 13th century.

Glad I'm not the only one who's suspicious about the history we've been told from those time periods.

This. Map makers even used word of mouth back then, which explains so much stuff on the old maps that's not really there. Limited information made for shitty maps, actually good and reliable maps were a huge, expensive treasure in the days of the sea exploration. Most precious than gold was a good map and a compass.

>it could be earlier
good thinking, those sneaky hook noses love lies so much that they have to invert everything. You Danish cunts have a bit to do with our real history it seems.

Yeah mate, it's fucking crazy isn't it.. Imagine how arse blasted all of the quackademics will be once we figure out true history :D

Pic related was officially built in 1 year - Royal Melbourne Exhibition buildings, I vomited off the second floor balcony in there during last year's beer festival.

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That's not crazy when you consider China had THE EMPIRE WITHOUT WANTS. Which meant China thought their Empire was so grand and cool that nothing outside of China even mattered or was relevant. Their sailors probably looked at California a couple times and thought it was complete shit because it wasn't China so they didn't record the findings or do anything with them.

Same think happened with Vikings. They came over, thought they were on an Island but it had these crazy demon goblins that were throwing guts from animals at them all day and night and they decided to just let the goblins have it. They called them Skrelings. Those were actually "Native Americans"... They thought they were Goblins and said "fuck this place" and never came back.

History is weird is the point. People really didn't understand what they were looking at for most of it. Still don't.

It's only in Scandinavia that we find all the complete evolution of ships, from the simple log-boat, to the log-boat with planks sewn on, to the log becoming the keel... to the viking ship.

Only problem is that sails pops in the Mediterranean a 1000 years before we have it in Scandinavia.

Assuming sails spread across the world fairly quick, since that is what we see happening with inventions after book printing, it would put the ancient world in the middle ages.

There's a fucking giant lake mapped in America a little smaller than the great lakes by the Rockies. When you compare the shelves that surround the current peninsula and Mexico to the past maps they are accurate. Then when you move up to that lake going off the distance from the peninsula on Google earth you'll find the ruins of that lake that looks very similar to the lake that was drawn in the maps depicting California as an island. Do you believe in coincidences?

dude, we have this thing, called "geology"....

>which explains so much stuff on the old maps that's not really there
By making Frisia an Island, the powerful could say Frisia is not here, but somewhere out in the ocean. When the Dutch became free again. Frisia returned to where it is today.

also,

youtube.com/watch?v=oJfBSc6e7QQ

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Mudflood

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The same map has michigan looking like a thumb instead of a hand

> what is: maps were less accurate in the past

Giants existed

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there's only one mudflood going on in america and it's called your replacement

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So what happened? The lake drained?

>Do you believe in coincidences?

I believe the human mind isn't perfect and maps out stuff that isn't there and is there sometimes. Nothing crazy about it.

Interesting point, that's what I'm talking about. Maps have been used in political maneuvers since forever.

>quackademics
quacks, Now there is another mystery, since why should they be called that?

Where are the ivory towers that the academics lives in, since we have the meme, but no towers.

"REAL" HISTORY IS 200 YEARS OLD
EVEN AFTER THE 200 YEARS HISTORY IS STILL BEING MANIPULATED. FAKE GENOCIDE, PEOPLE, EVENTS, ETC
EARTH IS NOT ROUND
DINOSAURS ARE NOT REAL

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Yeah there's a lot of these insane buildings claim to be made in a very short time. Here's a video that goes into the robber barons mansions that were built in a very short time then knocked down even though the mansions were basically art

>Which meant China thought their Empire was so grand and cool that nothing outside of China even mattered or was relevant.
Because the simplest explanation is not that they are liars? The modern Chinese are known for being honest, right?

My bad forgot link
youtu.be/acRFzipa7VQ

Nuclear war occurred 200 years ago during Napoleonic era resulting in a vast flood. Flood of the bible occurred only 200 years ago. This flood buried all of the cities of the Tartarian empire (erased from history books) under thick layers of soil.

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only way that could happen is a big geologic event that either raised the channel or pushed California into the continent. in either regard probably resulted in the san andreas faults currently instability

Nuclear blast crater

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>There's a fucking giant lake mapped in America
The giant rivers needs to come from a giant lake, so it might have been logic.

Be suspicions when you see old maps and they get the rivers correct, since that is very hard to get right.

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Yeah basically it had a river going into the sea that was between the California island and the old American coast. If the ruins are there and the maps accurate with the land that's under water now. The videos I posted the guy mentions something about the earthquakes in 1812 that caused the Mississippi to go backwards

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Wireless electricity

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Proof of flood

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Those guns are well known, and is for shooting flocks of fowls at once.

Not even half as intersting as flat earth or jet feul cant melt steel beams. FAIL

Why do spam the thread with something that don't prove shit? You don't even post where the pictures are from.

The ruins of where that lake supposedly was looks very similar to what was depicted in the in the maps.
That throws a red flag for me either the maps they were copying were much older than we are told or this lake existed in the times of early exploration of america

Stupid fucking mutt. That's obviously Baja California in mexico. Are Americans really this stupid?

This is just as interesting it's another piece to the puzzle

War against who?

Also relevant things maybe you could expand on: the massive flood the graham hancock guy talks about, copper from the upper peninsula being brought over to Europe by Vikings and the phonecians?, the caves in the Grand Canyon that the museum of natural history covered up

Are you really this stupid for not reading through the thread before posting faggot

The Norse and Icelanders kept their knowledge of North America secret because they hunted Walruses there for Walrus Ivory and Walrus hides, and maybe Rendered Walrus fat, and maybe Narwhale horns as well.
The Walrus ivory was a valuable trading commodity in medievel and later Europe, as was Walrus Hhide, which was one of the prefered materials to make ships rigging and for other maritime uses.
Narwhale horns were usually sold as Unicorn horns and likely fetched a high amount since niwbody new where they came from.
The Norse moved West along the islands and coasts as they overhuntered the Walruses into extinction in various areas.

that's russian trim.

Well known meteor impact crater in Arizona

Most people, especially younger ones, have a tendency to believe that everything in our world is static and unchanging (hence all the dramatic wringing of hands whenever there's a drought, colder/warmer winters, a “record” number of storms, etc.), leading to some very silly notions about many things.

Only a little over a hundred years ago, it was completely normal for California’s central valley to turn into a shallow inland sea nearly every year. The catastrophic winter of 1861-62 saw flooding there that destroyed many newly built towns; this annual flooding was only finally controlled in the early 20th century when a system of bypasses, weirs, and levees were completed.

Most people, especially younger ones, have a tendency to believe that everything in our world is static and unchanging (hence all the dramatic wringing of hands whenever there's a drought, colder/warmer winters, a “record” number of storms, etc.), leading to some very silly notions about many things.

Only a little over a hundred years ago, it was completely normal for California’s central valley to turn into a shallow inland sea nearly every year. The catastrophic winter of 1861-62 saw flooding there that destroyed many newly built towns; this annual flooding was only finally controlled in the early 20th century when a system of bypasses, weirs, and levees were completed.

This inland sea was 20-45 miles wide and 300-450 miles long. It’s likely that early Spanish explorers simply assumed that this body of water was a permanent feature and included it on their maps.
In all likelyhood, it probably WAS a permanent feature not many centuries before, since the central valley was constantly being filled with sediments washed down from the Sierras.

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There were Southeast Asians from one of the the large Islands, maybe Indonesia or the Philipines, who new about Australia and would travel there for trade or something.
Capturing a bird and bringing it back, then selling along in trade might be a possibility.