The 35 mile wide crater off the coast of Iraq explains the water erosion on the Great Sphinx, Giza Pyramids, fishing villages 20 feet under water surrounding the Black Sea, and on the antipode location where the meteor impact shock wave ended with a shattered crust about 1,000 miles wide with the Hawaiian Islands popping through this shattered zone to create a chain of volcanic islands. The Pyramids used to be covered with white limestone, and show water erosion 400 feet up the side. The Tigris and Euphrates River valleys are made of salt water shale and muck.
The 35 mile wide crater off the coast of Iraq explains the water erosion on the Great Sphinx, Giza Pyramids, fishing villages 20 feet under water surrounding the Black Sea, and on the antipode location where the meteor impact shock wave ended with a shattered crust about 1,000 miles wide with the Hawaiian Islands popping through this shattered zone to create a chain of volcanic islands. The Pyramids used to be covered with white limestone, and show water erosion 400 feet up the side. The Tigris and Euphrates River valleys are made of salt water shale and muck.