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Search results for: anomal* in all categories
884 results found.
89 pages of results. 431. Evidence For Shortening Egyptian History [Journals] [SIS Review]
... in which a forecourt of Osorkon I appears to have been added to the festival hall of Osorkon II, i.e . the wrong sequence if Osorkon II was really grandson of Osorkon I (see temple plan in K. Kitchen, Third Intermediate Period in Egypt (TIPE), p. 318 where no explanation is offered for the anomaly). 5. That Osorkon II and Psusennes I were contemporary is suggested by the Tanis royal tombs (see D. Rohl, A Test of Time,Chap. 3, and many past mentions in this journal)and also by the elliptical pit which will be explained later. Looking back to Velikovsky, these tombs were mentioned ...
432. Summing up [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... University of Arizona, and who runs the Human Energy Systems Laboratory. They do research into what I would call the paranormal, but what they describe as "research, education, and clinical applications that embrace these evolving shifts in science, society, and spirituality .. [and that] .. potentially explains a large array of seemingly anomalous phenomena in psychology and medicine, including homeopathy, cellular memory in transplant patients, energy healing, and survival of consciousness after death." I mention Gary because I thought he implied that their lab has been able to record humans emitting x-rays. If Bruce's brain and cell model can receive external signals, then perhaps mankind is more in ...
433. Sediments [Books] [de Grazia books]
... From: The Lately Tortured Earth, by Alfred De Grazia Home | Issue Contents CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE Sediments We have entertained the possibility that till might have originated from the tail of a comet or cyclonically (tempestites). Using the typical approach of an intruder with an unwelcome hypothesis, I introduced statements of anomaly and bafflement. Thus, where is the till of the seas? Why is the correlation between till fields and glaciated areas not strong? If tektites can be exoterrestrial, why not till - remember that the feather and cannonball of Galileo fall at the same speed? And so on. Dreimanis could be quoted: "Most of North America, particularly Canada, the entire ...
434. Vox Popvli [Journals] [Aeon]
... described as surrounded by the "circumpolar stars." The circumpolar stars themselves are described as living in the a t, hardly an apt description for the eastern horizon. The Egyptian term a t, moreover, is expressly used to indicate the "far North," a dramatic confirmation for the Saturn theory, but one of many inexplicable anomalies for the orthodox position which, together with Dr. Bond, would understand the a t by reference to the eastern horizon. [7 ] The Egyptian concept of the "gates of the Netherworld," similarly, has absolutely no reference to the current eastern horizon. Rather, it has reference to the aforementioned site of the twin-peaked ...
435. Aeon Volume One, "The Cataclysm": Contents [Journals] [Aeon]
... may answer some of the most troublesome questions left unresolved at Velikovsky's death. page 8. The Chaldeans of Sumer Washington Times foreign desk editor Martin Sief takes an expansive look at Heinsohn's claims, offering some speculations of his own. Page 12 Did the Sumerians and the Akkadians Ever Exist? Professor Gunnar Heinsohn summarizes his findings, listing the many anomalies removed by placing the "Sumerians" and "Akkadians" in the first millennium.B .C . as alter egos of the Chaldeans and Assyrians. Page 18 The Signature of Catastrophe Engineer James Strickling asks us to reconsider the conventional geological column. As usually presented it speaks for uneventful evolution. But the actual record indicates unexplained, ...
436. Notices [Journals] [Kronos]
... our readership interested in purchasing this most important work. Vol. II:3 and II:4 of the SIS Review have appeared since the last issue of KRONOS. The former is an outstanding contribution to the critical literature on Ages in Chaos and is a must for those interested in Velikovsky's revised chronology. The latter has material on isotopic anomalies, the Earth's magnetic field, and scientific behavior, among other things. Readers are encouraged to write to R.M . Amelan (Hon. Secretary, S.I .S .) , 6 Jersey House, Cotton Lane, Manchester 20, ENGLAND. Subscriptions are $16.00 for overseas subscribers ($ 3 . ...
437. Aeon Volume II, Number 4: Contents [Journals] [Aeon]
... of Patten's Martian Scenario Dwardu Cardona offers a comprehensive critique of Donald Patten's model. The model lacks a foundation in myth and history, he argues, and many of the planetary identifications are either unsupported or incorrect. PAGE 77. Old Babylonian and Persian Tera-Cotta Reliefs Gunnar Heinsohn advances his argument for a compression of ancient chronologies, noting that perplexing anomalies in the history of terra-cotta reliefs are eliminated by his radical reconstruction. PAGE102 Discussion Dwardu Cardona, Charles Ginenthal, Ted Holden, C. Warren Hunt, Anthony Larson, Martin Sieff, George Talbott, Samuel Windsor. PAGE107 Aeon Volume II, Number 4 CONTRIBUTORS Dwardu Cardona, former Senior Editor of the joumal KRONOS, has also written ...
438. The Scars of Evolution: What Our Bodies Tell Us About Human Origins [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... Two metabolic peculiarities of our species examined by Morgan are the facts that we drink much less water than most terrestrial animals of our size and that we seem unable to gauge our salt needs. People with heat-cramps develop no salt craving, while those whose diets are excessively salty develop no salt aversion. For her, the best explanation of these anomalous insensitivities is that, as water-apes, we rarely sweated enough to require compensatory salt but that, when we were oversalinated, our eccrines readily voided the excess salt. One of the most striking examples of human uniqueness among primates is our brain size, which, in absolute terms, is exceeded only by that of whales and elephants. ...
... aware of Einstein's animosity toward the new cosmography, Velikovsky had not expected it from him; historians cannot be told what they will find by physicists. The next day, Einstein apologized. (2 ) Over the next year and a half, the two men engaged in friendly disputation, with Velikovsky maintaining that when Einstein had resolved the Newtonian anomaly in Mercury's orbit by applying relativity theory to its precession, Einstein had failed to take into account G. E. Hale's work on solar magnetism. In Velikovsky's view the anomaly could also be explained as the effect of an interaction between two bodies with different electrical charges. Einstein, in Velikovsky's words, gave me much of his time ...
440. Bookshelf [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... the New and Old worlds. The Lost Cities of Cibola by R. Petersen, 1985, $22 50 The author is a PhD physicist who has turned his attention to archaeology and geology and produced a book reminiscent of I. Donelly and I. Velikovsky in its catastrophic orientation'. He believes thriving cities in Nebraska were lost and anomalous geology created when a comet hit the area in 1680 AD. The New Catastrophism by D. Ager, 1993, $32 95 This is a sequel to The Nature of the Stratigraphic Record, already a classic among neocatastrophists. Written by an expert geologist, this book is described as vivid testimony that uniformitarianism is passé'. Jack ...
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