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55 pages of results. 541. Review: A Bronze Age Disaster. Exodus to Arthur: Catastrophic encounters with comets, by M.G.L. Baillie [Journals] [SIS Review]
... , betrays confusion and a lack of control over basic source material. Sadly, aside from one very perspicacious remark about Velikovsky's thinking (his misguided view of asteroids as mere rocks'), it contributes little new of value to the field of catastrophism. Baillie's starting point is the years when Irish oaks show dramatically reduced growth, indicating bad ... BC', Nature 381, 1996, pp. 780-783. 4. Kuniholm, PI, Aegean Dendrochronology Project: December 1990 Progress Report, Department of The History of Art, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY circular, 1990, p. 4. 5. James, PJ, Thorpe, IJ, Kokkinos, N, Morkot, ...
542. Crustal Distortion in the Holocene [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... for climate change (16). Evidence of crustal displacement can be found all round the western coasts of Britain and Ireland in the form of islands and stranded pieces of rock that lie offshore. These appear to point towards sudden convulsive move-ments, sections of the solid crust moving, or sliding on its more fluid substructure with fragments becoming bogged ... climatic boundary of 6000/5500 BC. Previously, dry land existed between Britain and France and Mesolithic hunter-gatherers were able to roam freely. This is why Late Palaeolithic cave art is common to the Dordogne and at Creswell Crags. They were also able to roam freely across what is now the North Sea basin, and a common human gene ...
543. From Microcosm to Macrocosm: The Fearful Symmetry of Catastrophism [Journals] [Kronos]
... man did not wish to believe that he lives on an Earth that travels. . . . Even much less man wishes to face the fact that he travels on a rock in space on a path that proved to be accident-prone." Thus Velikovsky's words at the recent AAAS meeting in San Francisco, where he also said: "As ... . 25-9. 11. William L. Laurence, as cited in Groueff. 12. See M. Bussagli, "Terror and the Malign," Encyclopedia of World Art (New York, 1967), XIII, 1042. 13. See P. M. Stern, The Oppenheimer Case: Security on Trial (New York, ...
544. Metamorphic Evolution [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... , however, produce a free-swimming larval form with a primitive backbone, and other signs of incipient fishdom. This larva settles down after a few days on a piece of rock and converts itself into a jellyfish, anemone, or coral. Thus, here we see-in contrast to the frog-evolution turned backwards. At metamorphosis a more advanced form reverts ... , p. 213. 12. Ibid., pp.269-270. 13. David Raup as cited by L. R. Godfrey, "Scientific Creationism: The Art of Distortion-Where is the Science in Scientific Creationism?" Science and Creationism, (Oxford, Eng., 1984), p. 177. 14. N. ...
545. Joseph and Imhotep [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... the Middle Kingdom, after which no significant pyramids seem to have been constructed. During the eighteenth dynasty, kings were laid to rest in elaborately decorated tombs excavated in solid rock under a mountain which resembles a pyramid in shape, the entrances being off the Valley of the Kings. It seems highly significant that there have been no notable pyramids ... Djoser at Sakkara, which still stands today. He was patron of scribes and the protector of all who, like himself, were occupied with the sciences and the occult arts. He became patron of doctors, accomplishing miraculous cures and, years later was identified by the Greeks with Asclepius. During the period of Persian domination, it was ...
546. Velikovsky In Collision [Journals] [Kronos]
... , that there seems to me to be worthwhile evidence- from the geological record, from the history of climate, from the direction and intensity of the magnetisation of many rocks- for thesis II. Nor would I want to suggest that II is of anything but the utmost interest and importance. But from the viewpoint of substantiating IV, ... of the famous Hayden planetarium and chairman of the astronomy department of the American Museum of Natural History. Warnings to Macmillan, against publishing such a venture into "the Black Arts", were given by one of the most famous American astronomers of this century, Harlow Shapley. These were heeded, but the manuscript got votes for publication from ...
547. Focus [Journals] [SIS Review]
... of the time that all of the curious things found in the geological record were due to Noah's Flood. Then, about 1830, Louis Agassiz proposed that erratic bones, rocks, etc. could be explained by glacial action; and so began the dominant theory of today, that of Ice Ages. The idea of massive flooding was discounted ... the island beneath the waves. In the 19th century, Ignatius Donnelly tried to show that Atlantis had really existed in the Atlantic Ocean by collating supposed similarities in customs, art and archaeology on both sides of the ocean, such as the occurrence of pyramids and mummification in Egypt and South America, along with similarities in flora and fauna and ...
548. Did Thutmose III Despoil the Temple in Jerusalem? [Journals] [SIS Review]
... "Der Paß von Michmas", ZDPV 27 (1904), pp. 161-173, where more literature is given; and H. B. Rawnsley: "The Rock of the Pomegranate", PEQ VI (1879), pp. 118-126, with notes by Birch and Conder. 140a. M. V. Guérin: Description ... stones, and several cisterns. Dalmann suggested that the place may have been a watchtower (141). At the time of the visits by Guérin and Dalmann, the art of dating by pottery was as yet unknown. We may not be too far off the mark when suggesting that these fortifications may go back to the 10th century BC ...
549. The Charisma of Moses [Books] [de Grazia books]
... a visible visitation, not a talk, and certainly not a roundtable, and was not completely successful. The "footstool" of Yahweh was manifest in the gleaming sapphire rock and it is said that the visitors saw Yahweh but not how or what they saw of him. A more extensive visit with Yahweh was achieved later. For he ... moon or any of the host of heaven..." But there is no question of his meteorological interests and competence; he is a master of atmospheric and electrical arts. Why did he not expand Yahwism to take in the heavenly movements? The answer is fairly plain: there is too much fatalism, too little drive, permitted ...
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