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Search results for: geolog* in all categories

1682 results found.

169 pages of results.
141. Cratonic Stability and Rapid Erosion Events [Journals] [Catastrophist Geology]
... From: Catastrophist Geology Year 3 No. 2 (Dec 1978) Home | Issue Contents Cratonic Stability and Rapid Erosion Events Charles W. Finkl Jr Ocean Sciences Center, Nova University Port Everglades, USA. Abstract On the basis of denudation rates and erosional unconformities, conclusions are drawn regarding the relative importance of periods of slow weathering and ... occur with great rapidity or take place repetitively over a few millions of years. Some of the short-term phenomena were appreciated by mankind long ago and were given emphasis by early geologists, but the long-term disruptive processes which escape direct observation can play an equal, if not greater, role in changing the face of the Earth. Denudation rates The ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 670  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/catgeo/cg78dec/23rapid.htm
142. Tiahuanacu In The Andes. Ch.6 Mountains And Rifts (Earth In Upheaval) [Velikovsky] [Velikovsky Earth in Upheaval]
... and the site of the ruins of Tiahuanacu could support the necessary population. If the megalithic builders were living under these conditions, the problem is solved. If this is geologically impossible, the mystery remains unexplained."3 Several years ago another authority, A. Posnansky, wrote in similar vein: "At the present time, the ... Tiahuanacu, and still higher, up to 18 400 feet above sea level, or to the present line of eternal snow on Illimani. The conservative view among evolutionists and geologists is that mountain making is a slow process, observable in minute changes, and that because it is a continuous process there never could have been spontaneous up-liftings on a ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 669  -  03 Jul 2007  -  URL: /online/no-text/velikovsky/earth/06d-tiahuanacu.htm
143. The Great Debate [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... as well as ruined careers and has slashed across the entire spectrum of sciences, although arguments tend to become the most heated in the fields of astronomy, biology, and geology. It is in these areas that the war of ideas is now being waged. The past few years especially have seen startling evidence presented which indicates that the scientific ... over catastrophism was not very scientific. Geology as a science was in its infancy in the 19th century. In their attempt to find acceptance in the scientific community, most geologists sought to separate themselves from Bible literalists who taught that the world was created in six days. They tried at all costs to avoid the rare and mysterious; thus ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 667  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/cat-anc/vol0302/102great.htm
... Comyns Beaumont CD Home | Contents Part Three: Volcanic Powers And Limitations VI - The Key to Mountain Ranges THE earth's axis has shifted on many occasions in past days as geology demonstrates, and that it has so done means that the Poles are not fixed and immovable points. They vary in fact continually to a slight extent at the present ... should be able to produce evidence to this effect. A careful scrutiny of the world's mountain ranges offers a key in this respect which as yet has scarcely been used by geologists. In the propositions I am here producing it is clearly understood, of course, that the whole theory is of lands laid down from celestial contact and not the ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 666  -  31 Jul 2007  -  URL: /online/pubs/books/beaumont/comet/306-powers.htm
... been approached by Wilhelm Reich; initially Einstein had been quite receptive and had tried without success to verify experimentally some of Reich's propositions. While Velikovsky was writing his challenge to geological uniformitarianism, Einstein was working with another catastrophist, Charles H. Hapgood, who proposed that the Earth's crust has recently and repeatedly shifted due to imbalances caused by the ... it." The article was published and the reaction was as Larrabee had expected. In the August 7, 1953, issue [p . 167], Brown University geologist J. P. Schafer noted that the controversy over Worlds in Collision, "that extraordinary work of the imagination," had subsided, but he insisted that readers ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 666  -  19 Jun 2005  -  URL: /online/pubs/books/vorhees/11einst.htm
146. The Ocean [Journals] [Kronos]
... a forthcoming book by Velikovsky titled The Test of Time. SEDIMENTS Poseidon, lord of the Ocean, was the first to come to my defense. A basic assumption of geology for the past century has been that, though the sea may encroach on land by covering coastal areas with shallow water, the continents and the oceans are primeval; ... . The book, Worlds in Collision, though already three years in the hands of Macmillan, was not yet off the press when Maurice Ewing, the Columbia University marine geologist, published an account of an expedition to the Atlantic Ocean and the mid-Atlantic ridge. This ridge runs north-south the entire length of the ocean. More than one surprise ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 664  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/kronos/vol0504/019ocean.htm
... | Chap 5: I | II | III | IIII | PART IV : Appendixes I | II | III | IV | Acknowledgements | Notes And References | IV Nuclear Geological Dating Henry Faul, of the United States Geological Survey (Denver), wrote in 1954: "Almost from the beginning of geological thought students of the Earth have ... for the measurement of the absolute age of rocks and the Earth as a whole. A large number of diverse approaches led to a large number of diverse results. Nineteenth-century geologists differed widely in their opinions.They could be classed in three groups: the uniformitarians, led by Lyell, believed that the age of the Earth was essentially infinite ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 663  -  26 Mar 2007  -  URL: /online/pubs/books/gallant/iiic3iv.htm
148. Radiohalos And Earth History [Journals] [Kronos]
... more fundamental way. In some of his earlier papers on pleochroic halos, Joly argued that halos of varying sizes indicated that decay rates for uranium had not been constant throughout geological time. But later he reversed himself and insisted that pleochroic halos actually proved what everyone else had always assumed - that radioactive decay rates have always been constant.( ... now of the Chemistry Division of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, found himself wondering: "Can the earth's age be measured by radioactive dating of its rocks, as most geologists and geochemists believe? For some time I had been intrigued with the thought that certain scientists were using the terms age of the universe' and age of the earth ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 658  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/kronos/vol0301/003radio.htm
... and we must expect to find that such traces are only vestigial, faint, or absent altogether. This defacing or obliteration would naturally be progressively greater the farther back into geological history we go. However, the movements of the Earth's crust after the end of a satellite, which are the special subject of the preceding chapter, must generally ... the Alps played further havoc there and complicated matters very greatly. Because of the French part of the Mesozoic rift valley and the western Alps overlapping and becoming dovetailed, some geologists regard the latter as having been already formed before the Tertiary Age. The Mesozoic anchorage bollard or apex being situated in about equal halves about the French-Spanish frontier, the ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 658  -  26 Mar 2007  -  URL: /online/pubs/books/bellamy/life-history/14-evidences.htm
... indisputable that the British Isles were inhabited by the earliest prehistoric mammals and saurians, and also by man it is a fact which need occasion little surprise. More than one geological age has followed another, but for my purpose I am concerned with the last major disturbance, which left many surprising results in its train, and here I draw ... the original bed of the Rhine. Formerly this region of the Old Red, later called Hyperborea by the ancients, enjoyed a wholly delicious climate. Then there supervened what geologists term a "submergence", one aspect of which opened up the North Sea -gradually widened by subsequent events - the Straits of Dover, some Iochs of Scotland, ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 655  -  31 Jul 2007  -  URL: /online/pubs/books/beaumont/britain/101-north.htm
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