- Alexander Solzhenitsyn: he made up numbers about 66 million people killed by the Soviet regime, he spoke favorably of General Andrei Vlasov, he was a CIA stooge, he was an anti-Semite, a Russian nationalist and a monarchist. Finally, there is a popular saying in modern Russia: "show me an anti-Soviet activist ("антисовечик") and I will show you a russophobe" (which makes Solzhenitsyn a russophobe).
- Vladimir Rezun: he is a traitor, he is the creator of the theory that Hitler only preempted a Soviet attack which Stalin was about to launch, he is a MI-6 front to spread russophobic theories.
The answer is typically rather nebulous. They mostly refer to either one or two books (at most) and a number of articles (often articles not even written by either author, but paraphrasing, often rather "creatively").
This reminds me of an old Soviet joke: "a Party official comes to some factory or office to deliver a political lecture and absolutely tears into Solzhenitsyn's famous "Gulag Archipelago" calling it an ugly collection of lies. One of the workers present asks the Party official whether he read the entire book to which the Party official replies "I don't read such anti-Soviet filth!"
There is much truth to that as I have rarely encountered Solzhenitsyn-haters who actually read at least a few books by him.













Comment: Rather than the heavy metals 'leaching' from the earth's mantel, as the paper proposes, instead could it be that what initiated the rising sea levels was also accompanied by other events that resulted in the pollution of the waters?
As for how they coped, it's worth bearing in mind that the human body is quite capable of eliminating or sequestering toxins, especially at levels like those noted above which weren't aren't considered to lethal, and this is particularly true when our bodies have an optimal food source to work with, as would be the case with these hunter-gatherers.
See: