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Younger Dryas

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OVERSTATED2
OVERSTATED
The Younger Dryas comet storm caused airbursts equivalent to substantial nuclear blasts, with impacts recorded from North America to Syria.

While some researchers claim evidence of cosmic airbursts at sites including Abu Hureyra, Syria, and across North America, the "Younger Dryas impact hypothesis" is considered a fringe theory and has been widely refuted by the broader scientific community for lacking reproducible, conclusive evidence

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OVERSTATED
The Younger Dryas event caused a sudden global freeze and wiped out megafauna like woolly mammoths and mastodons.

While the Younger Dryas (approx. 12,900 years ago) was a period of abrupt global cooling that coincided with the extinction of many North American megafauna, it is not scientifically established as the sole cause of these extinctions; rather, extinction is widely considered a complex process driven

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MISLEADING CONTEXT1
MISLEADING CONTEXT
The Younger Dryas event caused a mysterious sea level rise despite the Earth entering a cold phase.

While the Younger Dryas was a period of significant cooling in the Northern Hemisphere, global sea levels continued to rise throughout this interval as part of the broader, ongoing deglaciation following the Last Glacial Maximum, rather than experiencing a "mysterious" rise specifically caused by th

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SUPPORTED2
SUPPORTED
The Younger Dryas impact hypothesis suggests that approximately 12,800 years ago, Earth was hit by a fragmented comet, leading to massive wildfires, a sudden rise in sea levels, and a return to ice age conditions.

The Younger Dryas impact hypothesis is a scientific proposal suggesting that a fragmented comet or asteroid struck or airburst over Earth approximately 12,800 years ago, triggering major climate change and other environmental shifts.

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SUPPORTED
The Younger Dryas event around 12,800 years ago led to the extinction of megafauna such as woolly mammoths and giant sloths.

The Younger Dryas, an abrupt cooling period that began approximately 12,900 years ago, coincided with the extinction of numerous megafauna species, including woolly mammoths and giant sloths.

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