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884 results found.
89 pages of results. 321. Tutankhamun radiocarbon dates [Journals] [SIS Review]
... or any other such august body. After all, it worked for the Turin Shroud and would help to guide all of us in sorting out Manetho's very dubious list once and for all. Perhaps the SIS would consider initiating such a project? Major A J James, Barry, S. Glamorgan A. According to Bernard Newgrosh, the anomalous Tutankhamun dates were not published. Very few radiocarbon dates from the 19th and 20th Dynasties have been published and hardly any from the Third Intermediate Period. In part the problem is one of getting hold of suitable uncontaminated material. Nobody cites the many hundreds of C14 dates, some high precision' and on short lived items such as grains ...
322. Testing Juergens' 'electric sun' theory [Journals] [SIS Review]
... not work for the bloated comas of comets either. How can an object a few kilometres across entrain a coma millions of km in diameter? The direct answer to Mr Davis' question is that no cathode dark space has been encountered yet. However, there is a phenomenon which might be attributable to a cathode drop at the heliopause: Anomalous Cosmic Rays (ACRs). These are cosmic rays enriched in nitrogen, oxygen and helium - elements that will be predominantly neutral in interstellar space. It is now believed that these elements are ionized and accelerated by the shock at the heliopause. I am somewhat sceptical of explanations which rely on magnetic field compression at shock-fronts' in a ...
323. Pyramids of Tucume, The quest for Peru's forgotten city, by Thor Heyerdahl, Daniel H. Sandweiss and Alfredo Narvaez [Journals] [SIS Review]
... . Monumental architecture started in Peru around 4,500 years ago in what is termed the Preceramic Period, with large stepped platforms, leading eventually to large pyramids. Pottery first appears in Peru nearly 1,000 years later but, strangely, had been made in Ecuador and Colombia 1,000 years earlier. Do we detect some dating anomalies here? By the 500s AD, the then established Moche culture suffered a prolonged drought, punctuated by occasional El Nino climatic events which caused disastrous flooding and resulted in movement to new sites. There then succeeded the local Lambayeque culture which built the pyramid complex at Tucume under consideration. There is evidence that when occupation of an area ceased ...
324. C&C Review 2000:1: Contents [Journals] [SIS Review]
... Question Session 1: Chairman - Brian Moore 30 Evidence from the Moon, Newgrange and Stonehenge Indicates Lunar Disturbance 31 Leonard Saunders presents a new analysis of ancient stone carvings. The Importance of Outsiders in Science 45 Bernard Newgrosh presents a roll-call of the scientific outsiders responsible for some of the most important discoveries in science. Archetypes Showing the Presence of Anomalous Electromagnetic Activity 53 Charles Raspil presents evidence of unusual plasmic activity in the atmosphere. Sirius and Saturn 60 Lynn Rose argues that Earth once orbited Saturn, always keeping one face towards it. The Demands of the Saturnian Configuration Theory 66 Dwardu Cardona analyses the demands of the Saturn Configuration theory. The Electric Universe 78 Wal Thornhill presents the case ...
325. The Saint and the Miracle [Journals] [SIS Review]
... From: SIS Chronology & Catastrophism Review 2001:1 (Apr 2001) Home | Issue Contents The Saint and the Miracle Phillip Clapham Saint David died in around 589AD as a very old man. He therefore lived through Mike Baillie's dendrochronological anomalies between 536-545AD. He established a monastery with a very strict regime. It was infamously harsh, as was the imposed diet, which consisted of water and herbs - such as cabbage and leeks. These are plants that can withstand low temperatures and traditionally come into culinary use during the winter months. This is significant, as low growth episodes would have led to crop failure and reduced yields of other plants. David's first church, a ...
326. Prehistoric Astronomy and Ritual, by Aubrey Burl (Review) [Journals] [SIS Review]
... SIS Chronology & Catastrophism Review 2001:1 (Apr 2001) Home | Issue Contents Prehistoric Astronomy and Ritual by Aubrey Burl (Shire Publications, Cromwell House, Church Street, Princes Risborough Bucks, HP27 9AA, £4 99) Reviewed by Phillip Clapham Aubrey Burl has written plenty of big books on stone circles, stone rows and megalithic anomalies. In this handy little booklet he condenses an awful amount of data. He looks at the theories of Thom and Hawkins and in a down to earth way points out that many alignments' are difficult to envisage as astronomical orientations. Chap. 1 looks at the puzzle of Ballochroy' and the Kintyre peninsula, in a swipe at ...
327. The Rotating Crust. Ch.8 Poles Displaced (Earth In Upheaval) [Velikovsky] [Velikovsky Earth in Upheaval]
... much lighter than the magma underneath, is only sixty miles thick, and that under the mountains, on the inside of the crust, there are reversed mountains, immersed in the heavier magma, which would account for the lack of gravitational pull by mountains.1 This is the theory of isostasy. To the study of isostasy and its anomalies (gravitation is, strangely, stronger over deep seas), F. A. Vening Meinesz, Dutch geophysicist and explorer of oceans, made many important contributions. He found in the very structure of the terrestrial crust signs of some violent displacements on a global scale. Thus it is not merely in order to explain the climates of ...
328. Editor's Notes & News C&C Review 2001:2 [Journals] [SIS Review]
... . In this issue Moe finally outlines his theory about what cosmic events could have triggered the catastrophe. Derek Allan was noted for his work with Bernard Delair on a catastrophe affecting Earth about 10,000 years ago, as outlined in their book The Day The Earth Nearly Died. Sadly Derek died before we could publish his paper of Arctic Anomalies'; as can be seen, it is a fascinating catalogue of evidence that an extraordinary catastrophe has affected the polar regions within the not too distant past. On the historical side, Nesta Caiger's Valley of Colours' highlights a small but significant contribution made by SIS members to knowledge of ancient Egypt. Lynn Rose takes both Kenneth Kitchen ...
329. De Grazian Discography (Reviewed) [Journals] [SIS Review]
... all catastrophes, if they happened at all, were long ago and far away. If we conjecture that the thunderbolt' which steers the universe' (according to Heraclitus) is global catastrophe - particularly throughout the period of human evolution - then the implications for all areas of human knowledge are profound. The very mutations that led to our anomalously complex brains may have originated in global cataclysms. Given this, it was clear to the great synthesiser Velikovsky that a new perspective was needed in every discipline from the earth sciences to psychology and in all humanity's fumbling for meaning in the universe, from mythology to religion. He made valiant efforts to expound this novel world view, as ...
330. 1895 And 1950: The Time Was Ripe For A Heresy. Ch.17 Supplement (Earth In Upheaval) [Velikovsky] [Velikovsky Earth in Upheaval]
... nineteenth century and became the foundation of scientific thought. In 1846 Leverrier, by announcing the existence of the planet Neptune, which was immediately thereafter discovered in the part of the sky indicated by him, proved the gravitational theory of Newton and the orderly universe of Laplace to be correct. However, in the same year, by detecting the anomaly in the revolution of Mercury, always accumulating in one and the same direction, he threw the first doubt on the infallibility of these very laws. The theory of uniformity, as understood by Lamarck and Hutton and developed by Lyell, became the cornerstone of the Darwinian theory, and Darwin went so far as to say that anybody who ...
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