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329 results found.
33 pages of results. 311. Additional Examples of Correct Prognosis [Books] [de Grazia books]
... - and did - change its axis, even with no external force applied. Confirmed is also the conclusion that advanced human culture would be found in the today uninhabited area on the Kolyma or Lena rivers flowing into the Arctic Ocean' in northeastern Siberia (W . in C., p. 329) in the region where herds of mammoths roamed. Already in 1951, A. P. Okladnikov [31] making known the results of his research in northern Siberia, wrote: about two to three millennia before our era, neolithic races...spread to the very coast of the Arctic Ocean in the north and the Kolyma in the east. ' Twenty-five hundred ...
312. Facing Many Problems, Part 2 Epilogue (Worlds in Collision) [Velikovsky] [Velikovsky Worlds in Collision]
... and how much, if any, of it can be traced in our beliefs, emotions, and behaviour as directed from the unconscious or subconscious strata of the mind.1 In the present volume geological and paleontological material was discussed only occasionally- when we dealt with rocks being carried considerable distances and placed on top of foreign formations; with mammoths being killed in a catastrophe; with the c hanges of climate, the geographical contours of the polar ice in the past, moraines in Africa, and remains of human culture in the north of Alaska; with the source of a substantial part of oil deposits, the origin of volcanoes, the cause of earthquakes. H owever, ...
313. Ice Age Milankovitch Cycles Or Epicycles [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... ," KRONOS Vol XII, No. 2, (Spring 1987) 61. Robert Claiborne, Climate, Man and History, (NY 1970), p. 117 62. Ibid pp. 119-120 63. Ibid., pp. 121-122 64 ibid., pp. 122-123: see also Charles Ginenthal, The Extinction of the Mammoth; The Velikovskian Vol III, Nos. 2-3 (1997) pp. 252-263 which shows modern evidence still shows an Ice Age based on Milankovich cycles is without support 65 ibid., pp. 123-124 66 Ibid, p. 124 67. Ibid., p. 140 68. Mewhinney, "Minds" Part 1, p ...
314. Focus [Journals] [SIS Review]
... Sheba, as supported by the archaeological evidence; "The Origins of Modern Geological Theory" by George Grinnell, which may prove to be an eye-opener for those who believe the doctrine of uniformity to be derived entirely from achieved knowledge; and Dwardu Cardona's "state of the nation" report surveying the problems remaining in the case of the frozen mammoths of Siberia. The other excellent material is provided by Alfred de Grazia (" Palaeo-Calcinology: Destruction by Fire in Prehistoric and Ancient Times" - a subject covered on his recent visit to London), Irving Wolfe (part 2 of "The Catastrophic Substructure of Antony and Cleopatra'"), Ralph Juergens (discussing Velikovsky's claims regarding ...
315. A New Theory of Celtic Festivals [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... traces could remain to this day. Charles H. Hapgood quotes the following reference from the November 1968 issue of the Soviet publication Sputnik: Archaeologists have discovered traces of a Stone Age settlement on the Novosibirsk Islands (New Siberian Islands) . . . They have found bone implements and arrowheads, as well as needles and axes skilfully fashioned from mammoth tusks. Spitzbergen was once inhabited, too. Proof of this can be seen in the fragments of prehistoric cliff drawings found near the present-day settlement of Ny Alesund. On the rock face are well-preserved incised outlines of whales and deer . . . '[ 32] Spitzbergen is some 80 North latitude; only the tip of Greenland lies ...
316. Imaginary Worlds: The Debate Heats Up [Journals] [Aeon]
... to date on the subject with supplementary reading, because the information in some of them is badly out of date. Ginenthal turns out several hundred pages more of it every year. I set out to answer his ice-core travesty, and later widened my scope to include passages from his books, Carl Sagan & Immanuel Velikovsky and Extinction of the Mammoth- which also deal with paleoclimate- with equal ineptitude. But if I read all this stuff, I wouldn't have time to read anything normal. The really hard part is bringing oneself to read it in the first place. The syntax is often as tortured as the logic. I'm not as obsessive as Ginenthal, and I need ...
317. Velikovsky in America [Journals] [Aeon]
... wonder that Shapley never deigned to reply to Velikovsky's impudence. He merely passed the letter on to one of his colleagues, the same Donald Menzel who had been mentioned in O'Neill's article. Menzel was no stranger to unusual ideas; in the 1920's he had even published a piece about how the ancient Eastern Mediterranean civilizations could have been destroyed by mammoth volcanic explosions. (57) At Shapley's urging, Menzel eventually sprang to the attack, but he bided his time until suitable opportunities arose. (58) In addition to Shapley and the Harvard College Observatory, Velikovsky sent his pamphlet to a dozen other scientists and to a score of large-circulation libraries. The only response he got, ...
318. Victory of The Sun [Books] [de Grazia books]
... a Thousand Faces, Princeton University Press, Princeton. Cardona, Dwardu (1973-74), "The Pyramids and Earth's Axis," letter, 4 Pensée No. 1, 66-7. (1975), "Tektites and China's Dragon," I Kronos No. 2, 35-47. (1976), "The Problem of the Frozen Mammoths," I Kronos No. 4, 77. (1976a), "On the Origin of Tektites," II Kronos No. 1, 38-44. (1977), "The Sun of Night," III Kronos (Fall), 31-37. (1978a), "Let There be Light," III Kronos ( ...
319. Ice Core Evidence [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... Siberia to Norway and from Alaska to Hudson's Bay. Temperate forests were also found on Spitsbergen, the outermost islands of Norway, and there was rich vegetation on Ellesmere Island and Novaya Zemlya. Temperate conditions existed for thousands of years both east and west of Greenland and at all the Greenland latitudes. This, of course, would explain why mammoths and other large animals were able to live, during this period, throughout these land regions. Therefore, it is more than reasonable to expect that Greenland did not escape the fate of all these regions, that it lost its icecap and grew a lush vegetation. But it is assumed Greenland was glaciated all this time and no plants ...
320. The Oceans [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... be immense, periodic turbidity currents that catastrophically carve submarine canyons rapidly. If even a moderate sized comet of six miles [ten kilometers] struck the ocean, there would be gigantic tidal waves over the land masses. But they could not retilt the Earth's axis and permanently change the climate, as I pointed out in The Extinction of the Mammoth, Vol. 111, Nos. 2 and 3 of The Velikovskian (New York, 1997). But let us return to further evidence of an immense Holocene flood. In fact, Corliss points to a similar solution offered by an establishment scientist. "Even more intriguing to the Catastrophist is the suggestion (by Elwood C. ...
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