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Randall Carlson Lake Missoula
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The Mega Flood in North America
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Randall Carlson Lake Missoula
Flood
Randall Carlson Lake
Agassiz
www Rqandall
Carlson Com
Randall Carlson
Kosmogaphia 85
Randall Carlson
1997
Randall Carlson
66
Randall Carlson
Peggy at Snake River
Kosmographia Podcasts
Randall Carlson
2025
Glacial Lake
Agassiz
Randall Carlson
Giza
Randall
RD40
Labyrinth of Hawara Randal
Carlson
Kosmographia
Missoula
Megafloods
Glacier Floods
Geology Mysteries
The Mega Flood in North America
Carlson
Young Premature
1:01
Randall Carlson reaches back to a 1960 scientific paper that was already presenting evidence, more than six decades ago, for something the mainstream timeline was slow to accept - that the transition out of the last glacial period was not gradual. It was rapid. The paper synthesised data from deep sea sediment cores and from the changing water levels of the Great Basin lakes to build a picture of a climate system that shifted on a timescale far shorter than the uniformitarian model predicted.The
12.1K views
1 month ago
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Randall Carlson
1:06
The Missoula Floods are legendary—but was Lake Missoula really their source? We’re talking mega floods: water flows exceeding 1 million cubic feet per second. The Bonneville Flood hit that minimum at 35 million. Missoula? Try 10 times that—up to 400 million cubic feet per second. The landscape remembers. But are we asking the right questions? | The Randall Carlson
85.5K views
1 year ago
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The Randall Carlson
1:31
Hurricane Katrina was devastating—but the Lake Missoula floods were on another scale entirely. Modern floods? Measured in millions of cubic feet per second. Missoula? Try 350 million. That’s up to 10 surdrops—the same unit used to measure ocean currents. And it wasn’t minutes or hours… it surged for days. We’re just beginning to grasp the true power of these ancient megafloods. | The Randall Carlson
40.5K views
1 year ago
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The Randall Carlson
1:01
Little preview of the Missoula leg of the Scablands tour, already scheduled for next year! ** https://contactatthecabin.com/montana/ ** [From #kosmographiapodcast Ep069] ** #randallcarlson #missoulamontana #camasprairie #iceage #floods #glaciallake #followtheevidence | The Randall Carlson
587 views
Aug 11, 2021
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The Randall Carlson
1:14
The Bonneville and Missoula floods—two of the most catastrophic events in North American history—are thought to be unrelated. But what if they weren’t? What if they happened together, triggered by a single, greater cause? Coincidence... or convergence? Join Randall Carlson on the Lake Bonneville Megafloods Tour and explore the evidence firsthand. Witness the landscapes shaped by these ancient deluges and uncover the secrets of Earth's past. Reserve your spot now—link in bio! | The Randall Carlso
15.7K views
Mar 23, 2025
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The Randall Carlson
1:23
The Missoula and Bonneville floods are the most famous in North American history—but they may have only been regional expressions of something much bigger. New evidence shows floods with even greater peak discharges once ripped across the continent. This wasn’t just water—it was a continental-scale catastrophe. | The Randall Carlson
410.2K views
1 year ago
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The Randall Carlson
1:02
When the Missoula floods surged into the Snake River, they backflooded 150 miles upstream, leaving fine silts at the distal reach. At the same time, the Bonneville flood thundered north through Hell’s Canyon, dropping massive boulders at its mouth. At Tammany Bar, the two torrents met —coarse Bonneville gravels overlying Missoula silts —a geological record of cataclysms colliding. | The Randall Carlson
37.7K views
7 months ago
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The Randall Carlson
0:57
@becketfusik Evidence from the Livingstone Lake Drumlin Field in Saskatchewan suggests something extraordinary...a subglacial flood of unimaginable scale. Roughly 84,000 cubic kilometers of water, the equivalent of thirty Lake Missoulas, released beneath the ice sheet in a single cataclysmic event. It’s a scenario so massive, even mainstream geology struggled to accept it. | The Randall Carlson
148.1K views
6 months ago
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The Randall Carlson
1:12
Want to learn more about the Bonneville Flood? Join Randall Carlson for a six-day tour through Utah and Idaho from May 11th-17th, exploring the remnants of this ancient catastrophe. Discover how the burst of Lake Bonneville’s dam reshaped the land and dive into the powerful forces behind one of North America’s most significant floods. Don’t miss out on this rare opportunity—get your tickets now! https://randallcarlson.com/event/bonneville-megafloods-2025/ Or click the link in bio! | The Randall
29.4K views
Mar 18, 2025
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The Randall Carlson
0:56
Lake Bonneville once held trillions of gallons—then unleashed a biblical flood. But how long did it sit at peak level before the breakout? Weeks? Years? Centuries? To sustain that much water, the climate had to be insanely wet. One study found only 3.3% of the lake's water came from glacial melt... Which means massive, persistent rainfall was feeding it. Until something tipped the balance—and 40 million cubic feet per second tore through the land. Still think climate doesn’t shift fast? | The Ra
127.1K views
11 months ago
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The Randall Carlson
1:34
The model claims gradual lake filling over decades as ice advanced south near Lake Pend Oreille. Lake fills to 2,000 feet deep. Bursts through. Repeats 80 times. The problem: polar glaciers are frozen to the ground. Temperate glaciers ride on meltwater beneath them. How could a polar glacier exist next to 600 cubic miles of water? It couldn’t. A new model of catastrophism is emerging. | The Randall Carlson
60.6K views
5 months ago
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The Randall Carlson
1:02
Glacial Lake Ronan wasn’t just a lake—it was a massive reservoir held back by an ice lobe. As the ice blocked valleys and diverted ancient rivers, floodwaters carved channels like Grand Coulee and reshaped the land. This isn’t theory—it’s the hidden hydrology of Earth’s forgotten cataclysms. | The Randall Carlson
59.7K views
Mar 22, 2025
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The Randall Carlson
1:05
Lake Bonneville was a freshwater sea—1,000 feet deep, covering much of Utah. Today, it’s gone. Only the shallow Great Salt Lake remains. 15,000 years ago, you'd be underwater where you now walk through desert. What happened? The climate flipped. Hard. Rainfall collapsed. Evaporation dominated. And one of North America’s greatest lakes vanished. The Earth we live on… is nothing if not dramatic. | The Randall Carlson
100K views
11 months ago
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The Randall Carlson
1:29
Join me at Cosmic Summit in June. Use code “Randall” for 10% off. https://cosmicsummit.com/ Lake Manix filled, overflowed, and carved a 150-meter-deep canyon — not over millennia, but rapidly, just after 14,000 years ago. The timing aligns with the Younger Dryas, hinting at a broader pattern of sudden, landscape-sculpting cataclysms across the region. | The Randall Carlson
71.7K views
11 months ago
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The Randall Carlson
1:07
Becket Fusik The Missoula Floods carved branching channels directly into solid rock across eastern Washington, inundated the Columbia Gorge and Willamette Valley, and discharged into the Pacific Ocean. That's the kind of water volume required to create the channeled scablands, not gradual erosion but catastrophic flooding on a scale that reshapes entire landscapes. And it wasn't limited to just one region as mega floods occurred along every major ice sheet margin during the Pleistocene across No
43.5K views
2 months ago
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The Randall Carlson
1:10
Picture this: 350 feet of soft, young alluvial sediment sitting atop ancient bedrock. Lake Bonneville keeps rising… until it just spills over the edge of that alluvial fan at 5,000 feet. Now ask yourself—how long between the first trickle… and a catastrophic blowout dumping 40 million cubic feet per second? You're talking about a geologic detonation—instantaneous floodgates from a lake the size of Utah. | The Randall Carlson
123.7K views
11 months ago
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The Randall Carlson
0:43
The Bonneville Flood, North America’s second-largest documented flood, occurred at the end of the last ice age. Triggered by the drainage of a massive lake covering nearly 100,000 square kilometers and nearly 1,000 feet deep, it discharged at an astonishing rate of 40 million cubic feet per second. Its connection to the Missoula Flood remains a fascinating and controversial topic in geological studies. | The Randall Carlson
177.9K views
Dec 17, 2024
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The Randall Carlson
1:25
Catastrophes don’t ask for permission. The Guadalupe River rose 26 feet in 45 minutes. 104 lives lost — including 28 children. Texas wasn’t ready. Why? Blame flew around — federal, state, weather systems. But the truth? Disasters are local first. And if you're not tracking, communicating, and preparing… you’re gambling with lives. This isn't about politics. It's about preparation. | The Randall Carlson
13.5K views
9 months ago
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The Randall Carlson
0:46
We talk about the melting ice sheets—but where did all that water actually go? Exploring the Missoula Floods in the 1980s raised a bigger mystery: There are massive, unexplained gaps in the landscape… and nature doesn’t care about our research boundaries. The jet stream moves. The floods come. And the truth? It’s outside the box. | The Randall Carlson
34.4K views
11 months ago
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The Randall Carlson
1:35
Mega-floods aren’t mythology, they’re measured. The Bonneville Flood hit ~40 million cubic feet per second. The Missoula floods? Up to 400–800 million cubic feet per second. Water volumes so massive they carved canyons, moved boulders like pebbles, and reshaped whole regions in days. These weren’t rivers. They were planet-altering forces. | The Randall Carlson
44.6K views
5 months ago
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The Randall Carlson
0:55
New research from northern Canada points to massive subglacial floods — not surface rivers — as the source of giant erosional features. Near the Missouri headwaters, the modern river flows quietly in a channel carved by forces it could never match. | The Randall Carlson
34.7K views
11 months ago
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The Randall Carlson
1:15
In 1976, a dam failure devastated communities—but the relief wasn’t government-led. Locals stepped up, neighbors helped neighbors, and the response was fast, direct, and almost miraculous. Compare that to Katrina or Helene, where bureaucracy slowed everything down. The difference? Consciousness, community, and a mindset of responsibility. | The Randall Carlson
8K views
8 months ago
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The Randall Carlson
1:18
The largest freshwater floods on record weren’t rivers...they were inland oceans. At the end of the last Ice Age, walls of water thousands of feet deep and miles wide swept across the continent. Glacial Lake Missoula alone held more than 2,500 cubic kilometers of water before erupting in cataclysmic outbursts. If a flood of that scale happened today, it would be the most extraordinary event in human history. | The Randall Carlson
77.3K views
6 months ago
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The Randall Carlson
1:23
Imagine walls of water, thousands of feet deep, tearing through canyons and reshaping continents. The Bonneville flood drained an inland sea the size of West Virginia. The Missoula flood released torrents that dwarfed the Amazon. These weren’t separate accidents of nature — their paths crossed, their forces combined. Two catastrophes colliding, leaving scars still visible on the land today. | The Randall Carlson
247.5K views
7 months ago
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The Randall Carlson
1:18
Geologist J Harlen Bretz faced fierce opposition when he proposed that massive floods shaped the Pacific Northwest. Critics dismissed his theory, demanding proof of the water source. Decades later, evidence of an ancient glacial lake—Lake Missoula—proved Bretz was right. Here’s how the story unfolded. Randall Carlson's Sacred Geometry Retreat, 2025! Get Your Tickets Now: https://www.howtube.com/RCSGFB | The Randall Carlson
251.5K views
Feb 18, 2025
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The Randall Carlson
2:18
In the 1920s, J Harlen Bretz was ridiculed for suggesting a massive flood carved the Pacific Northwest. But he was right. Lake Missoula—held back by ice—burst free, unleashing a torrent that tore through the Columbia River Gorge with tornado-like turbulence, carving canyons in days. What Bretz called a “recessional cataract”… was a fossil of catastrophe. | The Randall Carlson
442.6K views
Apr 8, 2025
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The Randall Carlson
1:32
If we could reach the bottom of Bonneville flood sediments... we might find Missoula flood deposits underneath. Mainstream explanation doesn’t connect Channel Scablands damage to the Younger Dryas impact. Claims it happened before.But catastrophic rise events show sudden sea level pulses. That 400-foot rise wasn’t smooth. Meltwater pulse 1A: 14,600 years ago. Meltwater pulse 1B: 11,600 years... the top of the Younger Dryas boundary. Is there evidence linking these megafloods to the Younger Dryas
48.1K views
5 months ago
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The Randall Carlson
5:46
Thousands of Drumlins Across North America Are Proof of a Flood That Defies All Known Science
13 views
3 weeks ago
YouTube
The Cosmic Summit
0:41
A Million Cubic Meters Per Second. For Several Days. That Is What Carved Washington State.
33.3K views
3 weeks ago
YouTube
The Cosmic Summit
1:02
Matt Beall Podcast | Randall Carlson @therandallcarlson describes evidence that two of North America’s largest floods may have occurred at the same time. The... | Instagram
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4 months ago
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