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169 pages of results. 591. Fingerprints of The Gods [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... Nation, I believe. It was posted by Ted Holden and was 2000 some bits- if you want to find it, it is only two days old) used geological evidence of altered shorelines as a proof saying that local earthquakes and shifts could cause the change in shoreline, but because this effect is seen throughout the globe, it ... G . hypothesis would need to be quickly tested to develop predictive tools. I would therefore like to invite the views of the Internet community and in particular, those of geologists, archaeologists and astronomers, on the scientific validity or otherwise of the various data used by Hancock in his hypotheses that; 1) there were a number of global ...
592. Thoth Vol I, No. 16: June 15, 1997 [Journals] [Thoth]
... the age of the solar system. That's about 1 cm of water a decade, which is measurable. The oceans aren't rising that fast, and certainly haven't for a geologically significant length of time. ** end**- SNOWBALL MINI-COMETS By Wal Thornhill (walt@netinfo.com.au) Dr. Louis Frank's recent announcement ... It will also show how plasma physics enables us to understand these events dynamically, in ways that can be replicated in the laboratory. Processes that have mystified astronomers and planetary geologists need not remain obscure any longer.- Date: Mon, 02 Jun 1997 12:14:03 -0400 (EDT) From: Benny J Peiser Subject: ...
593. Thoth Vol IV, No. 1: Jan 15, 2000 [Journals] [Thoth]
... ? The small dimensions of this shift indicate the pull was short term (as in centuries to millennia) rather than eons. Furthermore the effect is relaxing, and in geological terms the distorting influence must have been remarkably recent." . . . Now it is true that Earth's present pear-shape could be explained through different causes than that proposed ... by their aerodynamic shaping during entry (or re-entry) into the Earth's atmosphere. So they will not necessarily be found anywhere near their point of origin. Concerning origins, geologists are satisfied that their composition is earthly. However, if the surface stratification we see on Earth, the Moon and Mars is due to deposition from space - which ...
594. Epilogue: Questions And Answers (Ramses II and his Time) [Velikovsky]
... Rouse; London, 1924), 1281ff. 4 W. F. Hume, The Distribution of Iron Ores in Egypt (Cairo, 1909). See also his Geology of Egypt (1925-37). 2 vols. 5 Hill, A History of Cyprus, I, 82. 6 In recent years it has been conjectured that alluvial ... and the Iron Age had not yet begun. On the other hand, meteoric iron is more difficult to hammer into shape than iron from ore. Some scholars stress that geologists have collected only a few hundred tons of meteoric iron, largely in the Western Hemisphere, and hence, as long as the source was scarce, the real Iron ...
595. Velikovsky: A Personal Chronological Perspective of His Final Years [Journals] [Aeon]
... who come after would still be a touchstone of scholarship. However, I have had a few privileged conversations with scientists in assorted fields- chemistry, astronomy, physics, geology- who also have some prominence in the scientific community, and who moreover don't disagree in principle with Velikovsky's assertions on planetary interactions and their subsequent disastrous results, but ... , who had earlier criticized Velikovsky in the pages of Pensée I with the statement that radioactive decay rates were almost inviolably constant. (York, along with Edward Zeller, geologist from the University of Kansas, and astronomer David Morrison of Hawaii, were the mainstay of Velikovsky's opposition at McMaster.) But York didn't want to be drawn into ...
596. Neocatastrophism in Geology and Paleontology [Articles]
... Transcript from the Princeton Seminar: Velikovsky: The Decade Ahead Neocatastrophism in Geology and Paleontology Sigmund Kardas Geology and paleontology are what are generally termed parts of natural history and I couldn't help but find comparisons to a very brief conceptual outline of the development of geology and paleontology with the general concepts of the development of social ideas, religious ideas, philosophical ideas spoken of previously. In the beginning of course the study of nature was like nature was this entire screen and the people that studied it were what we would call natural philosophers. They were interested in two key topics, the "What?", that means what they were observing, and the "Why?" ...
597. Catastrophist Geology [Journals] [Catastrophist Geology]
... Catastrophist Geology 1976 - 1978 [Back to CD-Rom Contents ] Catastrophist Geology Year 1 No 1 Scientific Censorship and Thought Control, Horace C. Dudley Whimsical Aspects of Scientific Theory, Norman MacBeth Actualism in Geology and in Geography, W. J. Jong Geophysical Time Series and Catastrophism, Vít Klemeš June 1976 Catastrophist Geology Year 1 No 2 Ferralite events - a discussion What has happened to Worzel's deep-sea ash? Johan B.Kloosterman Catastrophism and Uniformitarianism, Alistair F.Pitty Horizontal Landslides during the 1960 Chile Earthquake, Haroun Tazieff Mass movements in level areas, Doeko Goosen Overnight Valley Formation in Siã Nicolau, Johan B. Kloosterman The Yuty crater on Mars, V.Axel Firsoff ...
598. The Geological Record And Changing Forms Of Life. Ch.15 Cataclysmic Evolution (Earth In Upheaval) [Velikovsky] [Velikovsky Earth in Upheaval]
... From "Earth in Upheaval" © 1955 by Immanuel Velikovsky | FULL TEXT NOT AVAILABLE Contents The Geological Record And Changing Forms Of Life His thesis of the origin of species by natural selection Darwin supported by reference to (1 ) variations in domestic animals, especially when the breeder deliberately develops a certain desirable feature; (2 ) the anatomical similarity of many related species; and (3 ) the geological record. However, though breeders have created new races or variations, they have created no new animal species. In the anatomy of living creatures "the distinctness of the specific forms, and their not being blended together by innumerable transitional links, is a very obvious difficulty ...
599. The Archaeology of Geological Catastrophes [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... From: SIS Internet Digest 2000:1 (May 2000) Home | Issue Contents The Archaeology of Geological Catastrophes CCNet, 28 February 2000 The Archaeology of Geological Catastrophes. Edited by: W. J. McGuire (University College London, UK), D. R. Griffiths (University College London, UK), P. L. Hancock (University of Bristol, UK) and I. Stewart (Brunel University, UK). Geological Society Special Publication no. 171, 28 April 2000. ISBN: 1-86239-062-2. 440 Pages. Hardback List price: £79.00 / US$132.00 www.geolsoc.org.uk Archaeology is playing ...
600. Making Sense of Astronomy and Geology by Dirk Bontes (Book Review). C&C Review 2002:1 [Journals] [SIS Review]
... From: SIS Chronology & Catastrophism Review 2002:1 (Jul 2002) Home | Issue Contents Book Review Making Sense of Astronomy and Geology by Dirk Bontes 3rd edition, Amsterdam, Sept. 2000 Hardcover 100 Dutch guilders+ shipping, metal/or plastic spiral bound version 70/60 Dutch guilders+ shipping from dbontes@mail.uba.uva.nl David Salkeld The rich diversity of papers presented at a conference on astrophysics might be published as a book without Introduction or Conclusion. Making Sense of Astronomy and Geology (MSAG) is that sort of book, with two important differences: two of the papers' - the book's 25 chapters - are from a conference ...
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