774 AD Solar Blast 20x's Larger Than 'Carrington Event'

by Mitch Battros - Earth Changes Media
A new study just released indicates the June 2012 discovery by a team of
Japanese scientists showing a spike in carbon-14 found in tree rings
dating between 774-775 AD - was most likely caused by a CME (coronal
mass ejection). Until now, the 1859
"Carrington Event" has been documented as the largest solar event to
hit Earth ever recorded.

A research team lead by Adrian Melott, Professor of Physics and
Astronomy at the University of Kansas and Brian Thomas, Professor of
Physics and Astronomy at Washburn University, have examined the evidence
and zeroed in on the likely source of the 774-775 AD carbon-14 event.
It was noted that recent observations of stars similar to the Sun made
by the Kepler satellite suggest that they are flaring at levels similar
to that which they suggest - and higher - at average intervals of a few
hundred to thousand years.

This new discovery has been titled the "Charlemagne Event" - named
after Charlemagne's victory over the Lombards during the same period.
"What our team concluded was the Charlemagne Event would be 10 or 20
times greater than the
Carrington Event of 1859".
FULL ARTICLE -
http://bit.ly/YGfwBV
Mitch Battros Producer - Earth Changes Media
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