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Search results for: dinosaur? in all categories
350 results found.
35 pages of results. 211. Thoth Vol canoes" of [Journals] [Thoth]
... by David Talbott. [ ] "The Electric Universe." 44.00 CD ROM on the work of Wallace Thornhill. [ ] "The Electric Universe." 24.95 Notebook with slide images and comments by Wallace Thornhill. [ ] "Mass Extinctions". 30.00 VHS of film on the impact that killed the dinosaurs. R Dunlap producer. [ ] Subscription to AEON: A Journal of Myth 40.00 and Science. The key source of continuing articles on the Saturn theory (and now, the electric universe as well). [ ] Martian Metamorphoses. 20.00 Book by Ev Cochrane, exploring the mythical images of Mars, based ...
212. The Book Case [Journals] [Kronos]
... ". . . provides an engrossing account of the momentous disasters in our history as it pinpoints much of the current research on their prevention, prediction and impact." Velikovsky Reconsidered by the Editors of Pensee. Available in soft cover from Warner Books, N. Y., N. Y. $2 .25. The Hot-Blooded Dinosaurs by Adrian J. Desmond. Available from The Dial Press, New York, N. Y.; 238 pages plus index. In hard cover only. $12.95. "A Revolution in Palaeontology"- highly recommended. The Sirius Mystery by Robert K. G. Temple. Available from St. Martin's Press, ...
213. Review: New Insights into Antiquity - A Drawing Aside of the Veil, by R. Petersen [Journals] [SIS Review]
... at what he believes was Cibbola, Sodom and Gomorrah, the abandoned statues on Easter Island, the Earth's magnetism, electric storms, volcanism, Saturn's rings, Atlantis, Stonehenge, even fossils are explained away. In respect of the last named the theory is stretched to even more incredible dimensions with the suggestion that the seemingly impossible size of dinosaurs is due to the fossils being magnified as they entered our world. What started as a book with interesting possibilities unfortunately degenerates into a catalogue of the risible. ...
214. Monitor [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... Cretaceous problem, mentioning Prinn's theory but leaving an open mind on whether the extinctions were caused by impacts or volcanic effects. The evidence against the impact hypothesis will now be familiar to Workshop readers: Charles B. Officer and others proposing instead that all evidence, including the shocked quartz grains, can be explained by terrestrial volcanism; the Montana dinosaur excavators claiming that the terminal Cretaceous die-off was slow and prolonged. New Scientist 31.3 .88 tells of the theory of O'Keefe & Ahrens of Pasadena, who have suggested that a comet or asteroid hit limestone deposits, releasing huge quantities of CO2 into the atmosphere. No, not acid rain, but the old greenhouse effect they ...
215. Thoth Vol canoes" on the Jovian moon Io, [Journals] [Thoth]
... by David Talbott. [ ] "The Electric Universe." CD Rom on the 44.00 work of Wallace Thornhill. [ ] "The Electric Universe." Notebook, with 24.95 slide images and comments by Wallace Thornhill. [ ] "Mass Extinctions" VHS of film on the impact 30.00 that killed the dinosaurs. R Dunlap producer [ ] Subscription to AEON: A Journal of Myth 40.00 and Science. The key source of continuing articles on the Saturn theory (and now, the electric universe as well). [ ] "Catastrophism Archive CD." $245.00 Institutional price 325.00 A comprehensive collection of past-issue ...
216. Crosswords [Journals] [SIS Review]
... 6 ) 3. Bailiff concerning the end of the day (5 ) 4. British sports car of medium radius (3 ) 5. Raphia woven above name of dangerous corner (7 ) 6. Non-miraculous part of 34. 7. Solid figure shows up girl in sink (7 ) 8. Former metal state, like the dinosaurs (7 ) 9. Friend supplies a note (3 ) 10. Five drinks upset by dance (5 ) 11. with 24. Aye, it's about self origination (6 ) 14. with 46 ACROSS and 43 UP: The Alpha and Omega of W. in C. (six words) 18. Some comic ...
217. Bookshelf [Journals] [SIS Review]
... Her ideas are so radical that academic libraries have been warned not to buy the book. Darwin's Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to Darwinism by M.J . Behe, 1996, $25 As the title suggests this is a new slant on the subject of evolution, indicating that more than Darwinistic mechanisms must be involved. The Great Dinosaur Extinction Controversy by Charles Officer and J. Page, 1996, $23.00 No, not another book about the CT impact but a refutation of this theory by some geologists. It seems that the theory has gained acceptance due more to the pushing power of its protagonists than the strength of the palaeontological evidence. The final pages ...
218. Thoth [Journals] [Thoth]
... . [ ] "Symbols of an Alien Sky." Notebook, with 24.95 images and narrative by David Talbott. [ ] "The Electric Universe." Notebook, with 24.95 slide images and comments by Wallace Thornhill. [ ] "Mass Extinctions" VHS of film on the impact 30.00 that killed the dinosaurs. R Dunlap producer [ ] Subscription to AEON: A Journal of Myth 45.00 and Science. 3 issues annually [ ] Subscription to ATLANTIS RISING. 6 issues 24.95 SUBTOTAL __ __ __ __ Shipping and Handling 5.00 TOTAL $_ __ __ __ _ U.S ...
219. Thoth [Journals] [Thoth]
... by David Talbott. [ ] "The Electric Universe." CD Rom on the 44.00 work of Wallace Thornhill. [ ] "The Electric Universe." Notebook, with 24.95 slide images and comments by Wallace Thornhill. [ ] "Mass Extinctions" VHS of film on the impact 30.00 that killed the dinosaurs. R Dunlap producer [ ] Subscription to AEON: A Journal of Myth 45.00 and Science. SUBTOTAL __ __ __ __ __ __ _ Shipping and Handling 5.00 TOTAL __ __ __ __ __ __ _ NAME __ __ __ __ ...
220. Epilogue [Books] [de Grazia books]
... yrs. 2 13 13 9 55 27 23 33 74 72 22 57 92 2000 see text below* * In the Q mankind caps the prominent insect, mammal, fish, bird and angiosperm plants, presences, which meet the Cretaceous that, with the J, T, and P down into the Carboniferous. abounds in reptiles (dinosaurs), fish both bony and shark-like, brachiopods and ammonites, with conifers abundant. Then we move into ages rich in amphibians, shark-like fish, insects, tetracorals, and productids. The Ordovician and Cambrian favour nautiloids, graptolites, trilobites, and lingulella, while the Precambrian reveals bacteria and algae. ...
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