Marie-Agnès Courty

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Marie-Agnès Courty is a French geologist of the CNRS who works at the European Centre for Prehistoric Research, in Tautavel (Pyrénées-Orientales).

She has theorised that the impact of an object (asteroid or comet) of around 1 km in diameter hit the Earth, in the Southern Hemisphere close to the Kerguelen Islands around 4000 years ago (around 2350 BC). This cataclysm led to a great deal of incandescent material, which could explain myths such as the Apocolypse and Sodom and Gomorroha. She arrived at this conclusion after discovering pockets of earth dating from this era that had been heated to more than 1500°C in a number of areas, notably in Syria and France.

This thesis has been critices by other scientists because of the absence of craters and of iridium in the pockets of land from this time.

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