Trees Remember a Solar Storm So Massive, It Could Fry Our Tech Today — And Almost No One’s Talking About It
What if I told you that 14,000 years ago, the sun blasted Earth with a storm so intense that trees still remember it? And what if I told you that most Canadians haven’t heard a word about it?
This isn’t sci-fi. It’s science.
A newly published study has uncovered the biggest solar storm ever detected — way bigger than the famous Carrington Event of 1859. This storm happened in 12,350 BC, and scientists only just pieced it together by studying ancient tree rings in France and ice cores from Greenland. Both show spikes in carbon-14 and beryllium-10 — telltale signs of a cosmic particle onslaught from the sun.
These kinds of events are called Miyake Events (named after scientist Fusa Miyake, who discovered the first one in 2012). They’re rare, extreme solar storms that leave a global radioactive fingerprint in nature. And they’ve happened at least six times that we know of — and probably more.
But this one? It’s the biggest ever found.
Using a powerful new model developed by researchers in Finland, scientists estimate that the 12,350 BC event was 500 times stronger than the worst solar storm we’ve ever seen in the modern era.
If it happened today, it could:
- Knock out satellites and GPS
- Cripple power grids
- Disrupt air travel and communications
- Shower airline passengers with dangerous radiation
- Break pretty much everything we rely on for daily life
But here’s the thing... nobody’s talking about it.
Canada used to have a strong network of local newspapers and community journalists. But in recent years, many of them have shut down. Big tech companies hoard ad revenue, and once-vibrant newsrooms are now empty. That means stories like this — ones that help us understand our world and prepare for the future — just don’t reach people anymore.
That’s why I wanted to share this today. Not to scare you. But to spark curiosity, awareness, and maybe even some action.
Because maybe... just maybe... the trees have been trying to warn us all along.
Let’s listen.
Want to learn more? I’ll be weaving this research into a future part of my storytelling project and book, The Alchemy of Ivy Mae, where ancient knowledge, motherly wisdom, and solar mysteries collide.
Let me know what you think — and share this with someone who loves nature, science, and big questions.
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