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1682 results found.
169 pages of results. 481. Remarks from the Portland Symposium 3-5 Jan 1997 [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... of electrical discharge?" Wal's response: The Valles Marinaris IS the giant scar of an electrical discharge. Then he proceeded to demonstrate to me that each and every predicted geological marker is there. (Rather than steal his thunder, I shall invite Wal to offer us a brief summary). 11 Jan 1997, David Talbott The conference ... demonstration proposed by Dr. Bass, film the demonstration, and include the footage together with NASA photographs and detailed comparisons, in a fully orchestrated challenge to astronomers and planetary geologists. 12 Jan 1997, David Talbott ...
482. A question for Wal (and Amy and...) [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... show a stronger remanent magnetic field than can be accounted for by Mars' field and oriented at varying angles in different locations. This could throw a significant spanner in the geological works because the same findings on Earth have been interpreted in terms of polar wandering and continental drift. Mars shows no signs of tectonic activity (continental drift). ... model, the southern hemisphere contains all of the ancient "weathered" terrain and the northern hemisphere seems wiped clean and has the new so-called volcanoes and the Tharsis bulge. Geologists are puzzled how such a bulge can have been sustained for any significant period. All of the new scars show little sign of weathering . It has been almost unanimously ...
483. Dr. Robert Schoch: Voices of the Rocks [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... years suggested by Egyptologists. This led him to examine the possibility of a lost civilization dating back to at least 10,000 B.C . Looking at linguistic, geological, and archaeological evidence from around the world, he proposes an outline of prehistory that differs markedly from our received wisdom- after all, if the Lascaux cave paintings really ... has gradually become more and more plausible, so that now, less than a hundred years later, it is widely believed that mass extinctions are linked to meteor strikes. Geologist Robert M. Schoch believes that if a large meteor or comet could extinguish most of our planet's complex life (just ask the trilobites), then a smaller one ...
484. Ice Ages, Prologue Ch.2 (Worlds in Collision) [Velikovsky] [Velikovsky Worlds in Collision]
... position of the terrestrial axis. If the planet earth is rigid, as it is regarded to be (L . Kelvin), the axis could not have shifted in geological times by more than three degrees (George Darwin); if it were elastic, it could have shifted up to ten or fifteen degrees in a very slow process ... that covers that island. There are signs that a retreat of the glaciers was interrupted by a new massing of ice, and that their borders differed at various times. Geologists are able to find the boundaries of the glaciers. Ice moves slowly, pushing stones before it, and accumulations of stones or moraines remain when the glacier retreats melting ...
485. Don't Rock The Ark [Journals] [Kronos]
... .D . Professor of Chemistry, Cedarville College, Ohio C&EN Letters March 21, 1977: SIR: Dr. Helmick, how dare you imply that our geology textbooks and uniformitarian theories could possibly be wrong! Everybody knows that diatomaceous earth beds are built up slowly over millions of years as diatom skeletons slowly settle out on the ... area- has a chance to look at it. I do know this: "Polystrate" tree trunks, fossilized trees running through several layers, were accounted for by geologists decades ago in terms of natural forces, yet the Creationists keep bringing them up to "prove" the Flood of Noah. I wouldn't rise to the bait in ...
486. Predicting The Past [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... Fall?; The Folklore of the Fall; Verbal Echoes of the Fall; Internalizations of the Fall. Chapter 5: Catagenica: Causes and Consequences of the Fall: Geological Catagenica; Paleontological Catagenica; Hydrological Catagenica; Meteorological Catagenica; Botanical Catagenica; Animal Catagenica; Human Biomedical Catagenica; Ecological Catagenica; Artifactual Catagenica; Economic Catagenica; Social ... history? Most scholars during the past century-and-a-half gave regarded these questions as settled once and for all. Ever sine Darwin, the great majority of historians, anthropologists, and geologists have assumed that the doctrine of gradual evolution was proven beyond need for further discussion. Today, the tide has turned somewhat. Now school children are taught that the ...
487. Science Versus Common Sense. File II (Stargazers and Gravediggers) [Velikovsky] [Velikovsky Stargazers]
... president of Harvard, himself for many years out of the scientific field and busy with administrative duties, was induced to act by his associates in the departments of Astronomy and Geology. Also, I cannot accuse the whole of Harvard University of being partial. The head of the Department of Semitic Languages and History, Robert H. Pfeiffer, ... . Spengler's Decline of the West. My book is a collection of historical evidences, and therefore, the historians at Harvard, not the chemists or even the astronomers and geologists, are the proper judges. Obviously Dr. Conant opposed my book, not because he found anything unscientific in it- he would have pointed it out- but because my ...
488. Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep... [Journals] [Kronos]
... the great submergence in mid-glacial times, and afterwards covered by marine sands . . ." writes H. B. Woodward. [* H. B. Woodward. Geology of England and Wales (2nd ed.; 1887), P. 543.] Hippopotami not only traveled during the summer nights to England and Wales, but ... hippopotami are found in the soil of Europe as far north as Yorkshire in England. Lyell gave the following explanation for the presence of the hippopotamus in Europe: "The geologist . . . may freely speculate on the time when herds of hippopotami issued from North African rivers, such as the Nile, and swam northward in summer along the ...
489. Religion and Education [Books] [de Grazia books]
... Big Bang," 5 billion years, gravitation, etc. B. Deviations approaching certain religions: intelligent life, short duration, unstable Sun, etc. XI. Geology and geophysics (Earth sciences) A. Conventional rhetoric: gradualism, landscape evolution, etc. B. Deviations: catastrophism, recency, etc. XII. Biology ... a bombardment of heavy meteoroids. This would leave thousands of unchanging species hanging around "unnecessarily" for millions of years between quantavolutions. "In other words," writes geologist Derek Ager, "the history of any one part of the earth, like the life of a soldier, consists of long periods of boredom and short periods of ...
490. Untitled [Journals] [Catastrophist Geology]
... From: Catastrophist Geology Year 2 No. 2 (Dec 1977) Home | Issue Contents Apophoreta - 4 Johan Kloosterman To explain the discontinuous nature of the fossil record - which is characterised not only by sudden massive disappearances but even more by sudden massive appearances, occasional bursts of radiation have been proposed independently by several students of Earth history ... of Geolooy. Pacific Press, California. Miller H., 1841: The Old Red Sandstone. Edinburgh. Schindewolf O.H ., 1950: Der Zeitfaktor in Geologie und Palaeontoloqie. Stuttgart. Velikovsky I., 1955: Earth in Upheaval. Doubleday, New York. ...
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