06.01.2013 Views

ALIEN INTERVIEW - THE NEW EARTH - Earth Changes and The ...

ALIEN INTERVIEW - THE NEW EARTH - Earth Changes and The ...

ALIEN INTERVIEW - THE NEW EARTH - Earth Changes and The ...

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

<strong>The</strong> fate of Lemuria, also known as Pacifica, Mu, <strong>and</strong> what Cayce called Zu or Oz, is not<br />

unlike that proposed for Atlantis. It is much like the destiny of humanity foreseen in our<br />

timeline by prophets of old <strong>and</strong> modern-day clairvoyants. <strong>The</strong> legends are all the same ... a<br />

thriving, advanced culture that suddenly manifested out of nowhere. <strong>The</strong>ir origins <strong>and</strong><br />

downfall are linked to destruction when their continent sank beneath the 'sea' due to natural<br />

cataclysms <strong>and</strong> human imbalance."<br />

-- Reference: http://www.crystalinks.com/lemuria.html<br />

90 "...polar shift"...<br />

"In 1852, mathematician Joseph Adhemar suggested that the accumulation of thick ice at<br />

the poles periodically caused the earth to flip <strong>and</strong> the equator to move to where the poles<br />

were. An early mention of a shifting of the <strong>Earth</strong>'s axis can be found in an 1872 article<br />

entitled "Chronologie historique des Mexicains" which interpreted ancient Mexican myths as<br />

evidence for four periods of global cataclysms that had begun around 10,500 B.C.<br />

<strong>The</strong> novel Geyserl<strong>and</strong>: Empiricisms in Social Reform. Being Data <strong>and</strong> Observations<br />

Recorded by the Late Mark Stubble, M.D., Ph.D. (1908) by Richard Hatfield used the device<br />

of a fictional study to locate a blissful nation of pure Communism at the North Pole on the<br />

isl<strong>and</strong> of Atlantis. This fictional Utopia was destroyed by a pole shift set in 9262 B.C.<br />

Hugh Auchincloss Brown, an electrical engineer, advanced a theory of catastrophic pole shift<br />

influenced by Adhemar's earlier model. Brown also argued that accumulation of ice at the<br />

poles caused recurring tipping of the axis. identifying cycles of approximately 7 millennia.<br />

Charles Hapgood is now perhaps the best remembered early proponent, from in his books<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Earth</strong>'s Shifting Crust (1958) (which includes a foreword by Albert Einstein) <strong>and</strong><br />

Path of the Pole (1970). Hapgood, building on Adhemar's much earlier model, speculated<br />

that the ice mass at one or both poles over-accumulates <strong>and</strong> destabilizes the earth's<br />

rotational balance, causing slippage of all or much of earth's outer crust around the earth's<br />

core, which retains its axial orientation. Based on his own research, he argued that each<br />

shift took approximately five thous<strong>and</strong> years, followed by 20 to 30 thous<strong>and</strong> year periods<br />

with no polar movements. Also, in his calculations, the area of movement never covered<br />

more than 40 degrees. His examples of recent locations for the North Pole include the<br />

Yukon Territory, Hudson Bay, <strong>and</strong> in the Atlantic Ocean between Icel<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong> Norway.<br />

This is an example of slow pole shift motion, which displays the most minor alterations <strong>and</strong><br />

no destruction. A more dramatic view assumes more rapid changes, with dramatic<br />

alterations of geography <strong>and</strong> localized areas of destruction due to earthquakes <strong>and</strong><br />

tsunamis. Several recent books propose changes that take place in weeks, days, or even<br />

hours, resulting in a variety of doomsday scenarios.<br />

Regardless of speed, the results of a shift occurring results in major climate changes for<br />

most of the earth's surface, as areas that were formerly equatorial become temperate, <strong>and</strong><br />

areas that were temperate become either more equatorial or more arctic.<br />

Hapgood wrote to Canadian librarian, R<strong>and</strong> Flem-Ath, encouraging him in his pursuit of<br />

scientific evidence to back Hapgood's claim <strong>and</strong> in his expansion of the theory. Flem-Ath<br />

published the results of this work in 1995 in When the Sky Fell co-written with his wife, Rose.<br />

222

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!