Mississippi River DROPS 47% in 72 Hours — Ancient Fissures EXPOSE 60,000-Year-Old Secrets
Headlines like this one (above) brings to mind a hypothesis I've had for many years pertaining to the western US being hot and dry.
Mississippi alluvian fissures are draining water from the river. This isn't the first time water drained suddenly from a location.
Here's a map of the western Pleistoscene-era lakes. It is explained that the west heated up and they dried up. That doesn't make sense when you compare their drying rate. Without the water, the area would heat up. But, where did the water go?
If you look along California and Nevada, you find two major fault lines, the Pacific Plate and the Walker Play. Any seismic activity could create fissures, draining water into extensive lava tube caves from all the volcanic areas in the west. This also would explain the deep water hole called Devil's Hole in Death Valley. It contains fish found in Lake Titecaca in Bolivia. In fact, when there are earthquakes in Mexico and Central America, the water in Devil's Hole sloshes.
As well, as water receded, many creatures could have taken to the underground in search of survival. There are reports of oil drilliing in California in the 1930s that entered voids that held water, much like Blind Frog Ranch on the Discovery show, "Mystery at Blind Frog Ranch."
In fact, the Amargosa River in Death Valley runs underground in areas where Pantamint Lake and Lake Manly once sat.
The Paiutes tell a tale of the Hav-Musuvs, a strange people who apparently lived in Death Valley in the days of giant lakes. They were reported to go in and out of the valley when California was an island, and traded with others elsewhere. When the lakes dried up, they were said to go underground in Death Valley and utilize flying silver discs to get around.
They were reportedly seen upon occasion with large creatures like those from Megafauna, like Mammoths. If such creatures and people went underground and have adapted to water-filled caves with occasional outtings, this would fit that scenario.
The west wasn't a desert when these ancient pluvian lakes pooled in the valleys.
A group of MIT researchers has discovered that the American west must have dried up just about 8,200 years ago – and that it did so relatively rapidly.
With no actual reason for the west to heat up, but the lakes dried out fast, the only conclusion is that seismic activity created fissures, draining the lakes in a very seismically active region. Without the lakes, it heated up.