Publication | Closed Access
Characteristics for the occurrence of a high-current, Z-pinch aurora as recorded in antiquity
34
Citations
28
References
2003
Year
EngineeringPlasma ScienceArchaeologyPlasma PhysicsPetroglyphsSpace Plasma PhysicIntense AuroraMagnetohydrodynamicsSolar WindLanguage StudiesGeochronologyArchaeological EvidencePhysicsGeologyZ-pinch AuroraPlasma StabilitySpace WeatherAstrochronologyArchaeological Dating
The discovery that objects from the Neolithic or Early Bronze Age carry patterns associated with high‑current Z‑pinches provides a possible insight into the origin and meaning of these ancient symbols produced by man. This paper directly compares the graphical and radiation data from high‑current Z‑pinches to these patterns. The paper focuses primarily, but not exclusively, on petroglyphs. Many archaic petroglyphs can be classified by plasma stability and instability data, and their worldwide morphological similarity suggests that intense auroras, possibly caused by a one‑ to two‑order‑magnitude increase in solar wind millennia ago, occurred.
The discovery that objects from the Neolithic or Early Bronze Age carry patterns associated with high-current Z-pinches provides a possible insight into the origin and meaning of these ancient symbols produced by man. This paper directly compares the graphical and radiation data from high-current Z-pinches to these patterns. The paper focuses primarily, but not exclusively, on petroglyphs. It is found that a great many archaic petroglyphs can be classified according to plasma stability and instability data. As the same morphological types are found worldwide, the comparisons suggest the occurrence of an intense aurora, as might be produced if the solar wind had increased between one and two orders of magnitude, millennia ago.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1