Post by Aikári Salmarinian on Nov 15, 2019 11:50:31 GMT
Disclaimer: The story, Háranech... Fate of the Meandering Valley, is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used factiously. Any resemblances to actual events, locales, or persons, alive or dead, is entire coincidental. I am not able to vouch for the genuinely made-up names in the Mesolithic language of Doggerland. There are no official scientific data I can falls back on, so this is done by explorative approach and responsibility of the writer.
H5100... a time we think not much about in the twenty-first century, H12.019, as this the official date in the Holocene era is. We are asking ourselves about climate change, the ice that smelts at the Arctic and Antarctic, from the glaciers and permafrost areas across the world and the effects on our sea levels. What about places such a Kiribati, Florida, and de delta of Bangladesh? Is the emission of the fossil fuels the cause of this? Or are there much grander causes than we can think off? But 7000 years ago in the Háranech Delta, what we would call today Doggerland, and known as the Northsea, was once a grand valley between the shores of England, Belgian, Holland, and Denmark. Rivers flowed through this forested land, with mere and swamps. An abundance of life lived in this meandering valley, which had a pleasant climate, despite the ice walls to the north. The mountains of future Scotland protected against the ice-cold northwest winds. All of a sudden people noticed the rise of water nibbling their beloved lands away. How did they deal with the changes that lay in waiting? This story will be told through Jæggin and his wife Gávis, and they lived in Mesolithic Háranech.
Don't move this thread to any other place, it's work to view and read.
H5100... a time we think not much about in the twenty-first century, H12.019, as this the official date in the Holocene era is. We are asking ourselves about climate change, the ice that smelts at the Arctic and Antarctic, from the glaciers and permafrost areas across the world and the effects on our sea levels. What about places such a Kiribati, Florida, and de delta of Bangladesh? Is the emission of the fossil fuels the cause of this? Or are there much grander causes than we can think off? But 7000 years ago in the Háranech Delta, what we would call today Doggerland, and known as the Northsea, was once a grand valley between the shores of England, Belgian, Holland, and Denmark. Rivers flowed through this forested land, with mere and swamps. An abundance of life lived in this meandering valley, which had a pleasant climate, despite the ice walls to the north. The mountains of future Scotland protected against the ice-cold northwest winds. All of a sudden people noticed the rise of water nibbling their beloved lands away. How did they deal with the changes that lay in waiting? This story will be told through Jæggin and his wife Gávis, and they lived in Mesolithic Háranech.
Don't move this thread to any other place, it's work to view and read.