Article: <[email protected]>
From: [email protected](Nancy )
Subject: Re: Nancy/Zetas
Date: 14 Feb 1997 16:36:03 GMT
In article <[email protected]> Greg Neill
writes:
>>>>> I find it easier to imagine the magnetic
poles moving
>>>>> with respect to the continents, rather than
the continents
>>>>> to the poles!
>>>>> ZetaTalk
>>>>
>>>> The answer, of course, is that the crust has
been dramatically
>>>> moved during pole shift, where it slides along
with the highly
>>>> magnetized core.
>>>>
>>> If the continents follow the poles around, the sea
floor
>>> would not show any significant periods of pole
reversals,
>>> would it?
>>> [email protected] (Kent Nickerson)
>>>
>> The answer is that they DO move as one during the pole
>> shifts, the crust moving with the core, but the core,
being
>> surrounded by molten lava, i.e. liquid, gradually
realigns
>> itself afterwards but the crust stays put.
>> ZetaTalk
>
> If the magnetic pole stayed still and the crust moved, then
we
> would see gradual, sweeping rotations of the field direction
> mirrored in the lava; since the crust is heavy, it'd take a
very
> long time indeed to move any significant distance without
> completely melting itself. The same goes for having the
> magnetic pole shift and then having the crust follow. It
would
> take hundreds of thousands of years *at least* for the crust
to
> follow without completely destroying it.
> [email protected] (Greg Neill)
The Zetas say that the actual shift takes place during the better part of an hour. History tells us this too. In the written words of the many people around the world compiled by Velikovsky, we find the HOT EARTH description, just where rapid subduction of plates is occurring. These plates would not be hot enough to MELT ROCK if a very rapid subduction wasn't taking place. Also, ALL the volcanoes in the vicinity simultaneously went bananas. Slow and gradual is what you HOPE, Greg, not what actually happens. But humans and animals can and have survived, and there are simple safety steps that can assure this. Not if everyone gets jerked around by the likes of the Hale-Bopp conspirators, however. But there will be plenty of signs, increasingly, as these next 6 years unfold.
.........
Excerpts from Worlds in Collision, by Velikovsky, pp 91-92, Boiling Earth and Sea, follow:
The Mexican sacred book, Popol-Vuh, the Manuscript Cakchiquel, the Manuscript Troano all record how the mountains in every part of the Western Hemisphere simultaneously gushed lava.
(These) events are narrated in the Scriptures.
The mountain shake with the swelling .. the earth melted. Clouds and darkness .. fire .. the earth saw and trembled, The hills melted like wax. He looketh on the earth and it trembleth, He toucheth the hills, and they smoke. The earth trembled .. the mountains melted .. even that Sinai. He rebuketh the sea, and maketh it dry, and dryeth up all the rivers.
The rivers steamed, and even the bottom of the sea boiled here and there. The Zend-Avesta says "The sea boiled, all the shores of the ocean boiled, all the middle of it boiled".
The traditions of the Indians (also) retain the memory of this boiling of the water in river and sea. The tribes of British Columbia tell: "Great clouds appeared .. and such a great heat came, that finally the water boiled. People jumped into the streams and lakes to cool themselves, and died". On the North Pacific coast of America the tribes insist that the ocean boiled: "It grew very hot .. many animals jumped into the water to save themselves, but the water began to boil". The Indians of the Southern Ute tribe in Colorado record in their legends that the rivers boiled.
Jewish tradition, as preserved in the rabbinical sources, declares that the mire at the bottom of the Sea of Passage was heated. Hesiod in his Theogony, relating the upheaval caused by a celestial collision, says: "The huge earth groaned .. A great part of the huge earth was scorched by the terrible vapor and melted as tin melts when heated by man's art .. or as iron, which is hardest of all things, is softened by glowing fire in mountain glens".