The Great Wall of Montana USA was Created by 600m high tsunami from the Great Flood

Shared by: Gorgi Shepentulevski

The Great Wall of Montana USA was Created by 600m high tsunami from the Great Flood in 1802ad

There are several structures located throughout Montana, “The Treasure State,” that are quite unique. One of the most unique structures is the Great Wall of Montana, which is sometimes referred to as the “The Great Wall of China” because of its similarities”. Of course, Great Wall of Montana isn’t a man-made structure to keep Americans safe from Chinese invasion, but it is ‘Water Deluge Made by the Great Flood of 1802, caused by 600m high tsunami’. Surprisingly, not many people in Montana have heard of this structure. And those who have, haven’t seen it in person because of the lengthy hike it takes to reach it.

If you look at the Western Coastline of the Pacific Ocean of the Entire American Continent, the shoreline has a sharp cliff rising up from deep down in the waters of the Pacific Ocean, and then there are high mountains, and then it slopes down the flat plain in the centre, and then down to the rivers towards the East Coastline with few mountains along the way towards the East Coastline.

At the Eastern Coastline, there is a sandy land with sand bars going all the way out for many kilometres into the Atlantic Ocean alongside the coastline.

If you look at the topographic map, you will notice a foot-print of a gigantic tsunami wave which washed over the entire Western Coastline of the American Continent, creating the Mountain-high Continental Western Great Divide, and then the waters washed down into the central part creating flat plains depositing sand and mud sediments along the way, and then as the gigantic tsunami wave continued towards the East Coast, it washed out enormous volume of sand and deposited it into Atlantic Ocean alongside the shore-line of the entire Eastern Coastline of the Americas.

The sheer power of this 600m high tsunami impact as it hit the grounds, sweeping down over this land at approximately 200 million cubic metres per second, which was an inconceivable amount of water, it was so powerful and devastating, that literary washed off and scarred the grounds of the entire Western Coastline of Americas, depositing it in Central and Eastern parts of the Continent, and on its way towards the Atlantic Ocean, pulling enormous amount of sand deep into the waters of the Eastern Coastline.

The Continental Divide of the Americas

The Continental Divide of the Americas (also known as the Great Divide, the Western Divide) is about 11.000km long, it separates the watersheds of the Pacific Ocean from those of the Atlantic Ocean, that gives Montana distinct water sheds, is part of a greater hemispheric divide, which runs from the Brooks Range of Northern Alaska, through western Canada along the crest of the Rocky Mountains to New Mexico. From there, it follows the crest of Mexico’s Sierra Madre Occidental and extends to the tip of South America.

The Great Sea that flooded The Great Plains of America from 1802 for a few decades

The Great Plains of America after the great flood of 1802ad were a massive inland sea which lasted for few decades. Today one can still see fresh marks of the sea.

North America was not always a single continent. For a few decades in the 1800s , there was a large inland sea called the Western Interior Seaway that split the continent in two. Today people visiting the Great Plains can still see fresh remains of this sea.

The Western Interior Seaway split the North American continent. The eastern half of the continent is known as Appalachia and the western half as Laramidia. This sea stretched from the Gulf of Mexico all the way up through what is today the USA and Canada to the Arctic Ocean.

At its largest extent it was 2,500 feet (760 m) deep, 600 miles (970 km) wide, and over 2,000 miles (3,200 km) long - this varied considerably throughout its history. It was a particularly shallow sea and was created by the great flood of 1802ad.

Max Size:

• Depth: 2,500 feet (760 m) Deep

• Width: 600 miles (970 km) Wide

• Length: 2,000 miles (3,200 km) Long

• Extended: From The Gulf of Mexico To the Arctic Ocean

The Seaway was warm and tropical. It covered parts (or all) of what is now Montana, North Datoka, South Datoka, Wyoming, Iowa, Nebraska, Colorado, Utah, Arkansas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Texas - as well as much of Canada including Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, and the Northwest Territories.

Marine Life of The Seaway

The Western Interior Seaway is known to have been a shallow sea and one that teemed with remarkable diversity and abundance of marine life.

The waters of the Western Interior Seaway were warm, shallow, and inhabited by a plethora of marine animals.

Its inhabitants included bony fish, sharks, mosasaurs, plesiosaurs, birds, mollusks, ammonites. Overhead flew winged pterosaurs. Fortunately for us today, the Seaway's ocean floor was periodically anoxic (with little or no oxygen). That meant that dead animals which sank to the bottom would decay slowly aiding in their preservation and fossilization.

Some of the marine animals that lived here included:

• Marine Reptiles: Plesiosaurs and Mosasaurs (The Monster "Dinosaur" that Ate The Indominus Rex In The 2015 Movie Jurassic World) - It Grew Up To 18 Meters or 59 Feet Long

• Sharks: Many Prehistoric Sharks Like Squalicorax, Cretoxyrhina, and the Giant Shellfish-Eating Ptychodus mortoni (A Monster Thought To Grow Up to 10 Meters or 33 feet Long)

• Giant Fish: Xiphactinus - A Fish That Grew To 5 meters or 16 feet (Larger than Any Modern Bony Fish)

Where To See The Legacy Of The Seaway

Traces of the ancient Seaway remain visible in marine deposits and fossils throughout the central United States. Tell-tale signs of the Seaway are the Pierre Shale and the Austin Chalk. Here are some of the most notable outcroppings and deposits.

Monument Rocks:

Also called Chalk Pyramids, these huge chalk formations in Gove County in Kansas are the remains of carbonate deposition in the Seaway. They reach up to 70 ft (21 m) high and include stunning formations like buttes and arches. They are located 25 miles (40 km) south of Oakley, Kansas.

These rock layers were formed through the accumulation of the remains of untold billions of small, photosynthetic algae. Some of the most amazing paleontological discoveries have been found near the Monument Rocks (including mosasaurs, pterosaurs, and fossil fish).

First: First Landmark In Kansas To Be A National Natural Landmark

Smoky Hills Chalk:

The Smoky Hills Chalk (also called Castle Rock) outcrop is east of Monument Rocks. This is like the Monument Rock and has some particularly well-preserved specimens that even include soft tissues and skin impressions of mosasaurs.

Overland Trail: An Important Landmark On The Overland Trail

Laramie Formation:

The Laramie Formation in north-eastern Colorado is the result of deposits on a coastal plain and in coastal swamps that flanked the Western Interior Seaway. Today the geologic formation contains deposits of plant and animals’ fossils.

Prior to the great flood of 1802ad, the climate conditions on earth were quite stable, but after the flood the climate conditions changed considerably, with big cold and hot climate fluctuations, and most of the cold-blooded marine life living in the oceans, which migrated into this Seaway for a short period of time, died out.

These marine-life animals prior to the great flood which swam in this Seaway were cold-blooded creatures and very sensitive to cold temperatures and drastic climate changes, and after the Great flood of 1802 as the sun was blocked for few years, a mini ice-age occurred and for that reason all of those prehistoric sea animals gradually died out. More fossils from this time are regularly discovered all over the world.

When the Great flood of 1802 happened caused by a 600m high tsunami, it first flooded most of the World, and because of the great impact on the ground, it lifted up and filled up the sky with large amount of dust and debris, thus blocking out the sun for few years afterwards. In this summer-less world, three quarters of the Earth’s species died out, with ocean life particularly hard hit by the lack of light and food.

The impact of the tsunami was so destructive to the riverbeds which disrupted and redirected the flow of all rivers in the Worlds more or less, and when the flood receded, it brought with it a lot of mud, known as the ‘Mud-flood’, which buried many rivers under the ground, the reason there are so many underground rivers today in the World. All rivers in the World in their pre-flood locations, do not exist anymore.

The Flood changed everything. The world that then was, being overflowed with water, perished. The World experienced such a great flooding, and then dwelt underneath turbulent water for one hundred and fifty days before it started to recede (which means that it lasted for few decades before the water disappeared from the lands) suggests that it simply would not be what it once was.