T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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659.1 | reference points; | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Fri Feb 19 1988 17:32 | 22 |
|
Or maybe you've never heard of these prophecies? One
of the best overviews of the prophecies is Jeffery Goodman's
"We Are The Earthquake Generation". Dr Goodman has his doctorate
from the Colorado School of Mines, and is well qualified to evaluate
the geological predictions of the psychics. He has previously
written on using psychics to locate valuable archeological digs.
Goodman also presents an interesting summary of the Cayce predictions.
Just for your information, Edgar Cayce predicted a "warning
sequence" of events that would preceed the destruction of California;
1) the eruption of Vesuvius
2) the eruption of Mt Pele on Martinique
3) a quake under the Indian ocean causing tidal waves in India
4) Massive destruction by earthquake in Japan.
5) then California, then later, a pole shift.
For a more detailed set of prophecies see "Phoenix Rising"
by Mary Summer Rain.
Alan.
|
659.2 | | WILLEE::FRETTS | am I back already?! | Mon Feb 22 1988 08:55 | 16 |
|
Whether these predictions come true or not, there will be some
people who have learned to live on the earth in a less harmful
way. There will be some people who have developed a loving
respect for this planet and have learned how to survive without
using poisons. The overwhelming extent of the pollution we have
created is catastrophe enough, and it is there for us to see and
taste and smell. For some time now I have been feeling an urge
to go somewhere to be educated "back" to the ways in which we should
have been living on this planet all along. Now if only I could
find a place locally rather than having to travel out to the
Northwest :-).
Carole
|
659.3 | | 5691::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Mon Feb 22 1988 09:13 | 22 |
| In the latest Bear Tribe newsletter, Sun Bear advised that Bear
Tribe members:
1. store at least a weeks supply of food and water (more if possible)
2. extricate yourself from the system as much as possible (ex, get
out of debt)
3. land is worth more than gold as land will grow food and you can't
eat gold.
4. watch the earth for signs of the coming changes.
There may have been more but I don't have the newsletter here and
these stuck in my mind. I know many people who are preparing for
earth changes now. I have a friend (who is an engineer) who is
buying a farm in his son's name and getting ready to leave at a
moments notice. I have another friend who took all money out of
an IRA (paying a penalty fee) and used it to buy land in Maine.
Other people I know have 'contingency plans' in place... they have
a family camp or place in the country where they can go in an
emergency.
There seem to be a great number of people who are doing something
like this... and it never hurts to have extra spring water and canned
goods around. And land is certainly safer than the stock market.
|
659.4 | Remember the Stock Market Crash of '87 | HPSCAD::DDOUCETTE | Things to Ponder | Mon Feb 22 1988 12:03 | 8 |
| Something to think about, for better or worse. The future is ours
to create. If we prepare for the worst, then we may find ourselves
allowing the worse to occur. I'm not saying "Don't take precautions,"
but don't be overly paranoid either.
How many precautions does it take to create a self-fulfilled prophecy?
Dave
|
659.5 | ...Still Keep'n-On Keep'n-On | EXIT26::SAARINEN | | Mon Feb 22 1988 12:59 | 26 |
|
I look at this issue from the point similiar to note 659.4. That
we do in fact create our own reality and that the constant
watchfullness of the signs of the times adds alot of undue
paranoia into the system of things. Yes there are certain situations
that need attending to on this planet,populations explosion,nuclear
arms, hunger and starvation, AIDS, chemical poisons, prime time
TV :-), etc...and we must be responsive to these issues.
But, I feel we can make significant changes where we are in the
present moment, by believing and manifesting Love for ourselves
and others in our circles of influence. If in fact these Earth
Changes do occur, I feel in my heart what do I need to fear?
I feel secure in the knowledge that living is more than survival,
and "Having It All".
I choose to look at the future in a way that can make the ideal
of us, all of humanity, as One Loving Family who can respond to
each other in compassionate loving ways. That is my Free Will
choice that I desire to create.
So in this way, I desire to step out of the prophectic blueprints
of the past and create a better beginning for all of us.
-Arthur
-Arthur
|
659.6 | When? | FLOWER::JASNIEWSKI | | Mon Feb 22 1988 13:42 | 13 |
|
Has anyone scaled Geological time to our perception of time?
It could be that, by the time "California falls into the ocean",
we'll have long since achieved utopia or our ultimate destruction.
What is the time period of the cyclical destruction of the Earth
- the one that got the dinasaurs - 100,000 years? I dont know, I
just guessed a big number...
It may make better sense to plan a move to, er, higher ground
with someone five generations away in mind. Of course, by then,
who knows what they'll be thinking, or if they'll respect your intent!
Joe Jas
|
659.7 | | 5691::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Mon Feb 22 1988 16:09 | 3 |
| I saw an interesting NOVA on earthquakes and .... I'd plan on moving
to higher ground a little bit sooner if I lived in California_:-}.
Mary
|
659.8 | "check it out" | FHQ::OGILVIE | The EYES have it! | Mon Feb 22 1988 16:14 | 7 |
| RE: .6
Seems I heard that before the year 2000, many of these will come
to pass. Read Revelations and Nostradamus - compare the two!
We are already seeing the "disease" and other if you open your eyes
wide enough.
|
659.9 | Same as it ever was...Same as it ever was..Same as it ever was.. | DECWET::MITCHELL | Let's call 'em sea monkeys! | Mon Feb 22 1988 19:18 | 7 |
| Oh PLEASE, you guys. California can't "fall into the sea" any more
than Lake Michigan can evaporate.
Despite the best (or worst) efforts of so-called prophets through
the generations, the world just keeps on a-turning.
John M.
|
659.10 | | 5691::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Tue Feb 23 1988 08:53 | 1 |
| John, John, John,... you're so pessimistic_;-)
|
659.11 | nothing will change? nothing ever changes? | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Tue Feb 23 1988 09:11 | 31 |
| RE: .9 Hi John,
You suffer from great ignorance of geology? I live in Colorado,
and all around me is the geology of features that have been under
an ocean. How might this have happened? If the ground cannot
move, why are there so many ocean fossils to be found on dry land?
Your world view apparently contains delusions of eternal stability?
Or perhaps you just imagine that it won't happen now? It has been
noted that swift changes in water tables can cause earthquakes,
so, can you possibly find it in your mind to admit that we humans
may actually have the power to trigger geological changes? Or
that we might just be alive when these changes happen?
It looks to me like the next geological quick-change may be happening
any day now in Yellowstone park. I doubt if humans are triggering
this one, but then who knows? What difference might the presence
of a dam and lake have had on that geology?
We can drain rivers, make new lakes, drain some water tables, and
even move a few mountains of coal. We better hope none of this
starts any faults moving. I lived in Denver when the Rocky Flats
people caused earthquakes in Denver, whey they were disposing of
Nuclear waste by pumping it underground.
I actually don't think that *all* of California will fall under
the ocean. Just some of it. I find the predictions plausable,
but I still read them with a critical mind. I think it's quite
possible that these predictions are correct.
Alan.
|
659.12 | the question asked in .0; | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Tue Feb 23 1988 09:21 | 12 |
|
No one's really answering the question I ask in .0. The question
is:
What precautions are reasonable ? What precautions can we
reasonably take to prepare for the predicted earth changes?
Can I assume that all of you who believe that nothing will change,
will be taking no precautions? John, would you consider a move if
it looked like Mt Rainier might be becoming active?
Alan.
|
659.13 | Doom and Gloom, Bah Humbug! | EXIT26::SAARINEN | | Tue Feb 23 1988 09:24 | 22 |
| RE.8
I really have no problem with sincere concern about the impending
problems faceing planet earth,ecological,spiritual,econonmic and
justice types of issues etc.
BUT, the selling of Doom and Gloom of the future and all the fear
alot of New Agers are talking about only gives you and I a sense
of hopelessness, with no possiblity of a future.
I would much rather take the track of finding out ways to not just
run and hide and escape the path of Doom, but discover intelligent
and compassionate ways to re-create the reality so as to eliminate
the dangers.
God is Real and still I believe Loves US, and when I found out that
something more exists other then what rests under my armpits, it
has given me sincere hope that all is not lost, no matter who
says what about the future.
-Arthur
|
659.14 | | 5691::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Tue Feb 23 1988 11:33 | 24 |
| Note 659.12
Alan, I thought that Mt Rainier would effect the area west of the Rockys.
Would it?
Note 659.13
Arthur, its a matter of cycles and patterns. Some people interpret change
as "Doom and Gloom of the future" and in a sense I understand that but
thats not how I interpret it. Change comes and with it upheavel. If one
recognizes (or thinks they recognize) a pattern of change, one can prepare
for the bad times that will preceed the good times. We don't really want
to re-create the old reality with the old hypocracy and violence and problems.
Wouldn't it be better to build a new reality that will be better than the one
we are leaving (or being forced to leave) behind? Everyone has certain regrets
about leaving the safety of old habits and old ways but where there is life
there is always hope. One of the things we humans share with the animals is
an instinct for preparing for the approach of earth changes. I tend to think
that this is what we are doing on a larger scale. Sometimes I think that
it is God who is changing, or growing, or evolving and that what is happening
is just a reflection that.
Mary
|
659.15 | | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Tue Feb 23 1988 12:21 | 29 |
| RE: Mary,
I mentioned Mt Rainier to John, because he lives within
view of it, and was wondering if he feels himself to be immune to
the forces of geological change. As far as I know it is not due
to erupt. The changes in Yellowstone are another matter, and it
is fortunate that that part of the country is not real populated.
RE: all;
I am not trying to be a "gloom and doom" type, but perhaps I
am sometimes. But on the other hand, if great changes *are* in
store, then isn't it better to meet them with open eyes, and not
play the ostrich with head in sand? I, personally, can fight the
doom and gloom by active doing. I ask myself "what can I do
about this?" Maybe it's only a little that I can do, but I
feel better after a few preparations than I do with head in sand.
I find it interesting that most of the replies to this so far
have been along the lines of "I refuse to believe this", or
"YCYOR, so you better think only good things". I think the momentum
of mass consciousness *could* change to avert prophecised events,
but I doubt that it will change enough to avert all the problems
coming out of the future toward the present.
Do most of you *really* feel that all these prophets are false?
Or did my note just happen to attract the cynics?
Alan.
|
659.16 | | 5691::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Tue Feb 23 1988 13:08 | 7 |
| I don't think they are false Alan. Sun Bear spoke of a Hopi prophesy
that said "when the Little Sister speaks, the Grandfather answers".
He said that the Little Sister was Mount St Helens and the Grandfather
(unless I remember incorrectly) was Mt Rainier. I saw a National
Geographic special that spoke of 'steam vents' opening and an increase
of activity there. Sun Bear said to watch the earth for signs of
what is to come.
|
659.17 | | WILLEE::FRETTS | am I back already?! | Tue Feb 23 1988 13:16 | 9 |
|
Hi Mary,
You remembered correctly. And that prophesy was made long before
Mount St. Helens erupted.
Carole
|
659.18 | | DECWET::MITCHELL | Let's call 'em sea monkeys! | Tue Feb 23 1988 13:45 | 74 |
| RE: .11 (Alan)
> You suffer from great ignorance of geology? I live in Colorado,
and all around me is the geology of features that have been under an
ocean. How might this have happened? If the ground cannot move, why
are there so many ocean fossils to be found on dry land? <
And you dare to ask me if I suffer from ignorance of geology?! The deposits
you see are the result of changes that took millennia to accomplish; they didn't
happen overnight!
> Your world view apparently contains delusions of eternal stability?
<
No, but I am not so foolish as to believe in events that would be geologically
miraculous.
> Or perhaps you just imagine that it won't happen now? It has been
noted that swift changes in water tables can cause earthquakes, so, can
you possibly find it in your mind to admit that we humans may actually
have the power to trigger geological changes? Or that we might just
be alive when these changes happen? <
There is a helluva big difference between an earthquake and a global disaster.
California is due for some big quakes (what else is new?) but I sure wouldn't
run out and invest in beach-front property in Nevada.
> I actually don't think that *all* of California will fall under the
ocean. Just some of it. I find the predictions plausable, but I
still read them with a critical mind. I think it's quite possible
that these predictions are correct. <
The shelf that is California is simply too thick to fall into the ocean. I find
no scientific evidence that California is capable of doing so. Of course that
won't stop the "prophets" from making their predictions. Once a big earthquake
happens and someone's house falls into the sea, the doomsayers will just amend
their predictions (as they always do) and say the prophecies were fulfilled.
It's interesting that the California myth pops up around the turn of every
decade. I remember a prediction that there would be sea urchins on Rodeo
Drive some time around 1970! [An aside: If you want a real belly laugh,
read some of Jean Dixon's books written in the 1960s. She is living proof
that you can get lucky once with a prediction and cash in on it for the
rest of your life. It doesn't seem to matter that 99% of her predictions
never happen.]
RE: .12
> What precautions are reasonable ? What precautions can we
reasonably take to prepare for the predicted earth changes? <
Preparation based on insubstantial belief cannot be called reasonable.
Of course, it is always wise to be prepared for an emergency, but only a
fool prepares for a cataclysm.
> Can I assume that all of you who believe that nothing will change,
will be taking no precautions? John, would you consider a move if it
looked like Mt Rainier might be becoming active? <
Mt. Rainier certainly has the potential, but geologic surveys do not predict
its erupting in the near future. If there were cogent reasons to believe
that Seattle were endangered by an eruption in the near future, then it
would be wise to take appropriate action.
John M.
|
659.19 | | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Tue Feb 23 1988 14:42 | 46 |
| RE: .18 (John)
> And you dare to ask me if I suffer from ignorance of geology?! The deposits
> you see are the result of changes that took millennia to accomplish; they
> didn't happen overnight!
Yeah, I dare. At first there, it sounded like you were saying
that nothing is moving. Now I understand you are just saying that
all geological movement is *slow*. Science is still in disagreement
about this stuff. The conflict between "steady-state" theories and
"cataclysmic" theories is a long standing one, and is not yet all
resolved. I think there are long periods of stability punctuated
by periods of *very* rapid change. No point in arguing it, the
future will provide us with new information for our respective theories.
> Preparation based on insubstantial belief cannot be called reasonable.
> Of course, it is always wise to be prepared for an emergency, but only a
> fool prepares for a cataclysm.
Well, I've been called a fool before, and no doubt will be again.
But, in fact I think you might find many of my preparations are in
fact "reasonable". And of course you are right, that all I can really
prepare for is the more basic emergencies. How about you? Do you
keep spare food and drinking water on hand? I started storing more
drinking water, after Chernobyl, and the recent waterway chemical
spills have reaffirmed that decision. Remember, my original question
here is "what are reasonable precautions?" I would like to hear your
answer to that question.
> Mt. Rainier certainly has the potential, but geologic surveys do not predict
> its erupting in the near future. If there were cogent reasons to believe
> that Seattle were endangered by an eruption in the near future, then it
> would be wise to take appropriate action.
But, John, no scientist knows enough to predict when a volcano will
blow ! Although we are learning more all the time. Now, I ignore
psychics most of the time, but the reason I became interested in all these
predictions is because *many* psychics are making them. Well, I suppose
they might have all read Edgar Cayce first, but I don't think that
accounts for all of it. I think that all the parallel prophecies are very
important, and dangerous to ignore. Here we differ on our views of
what is a "cogent reason". I have seen enough to begin taking some
appropriate actions, and the only difficulty I am having is with deciding
what is in fact appropriate.
Alan.
|
659.20 | | GENRAL::DANIEL | If it's sloppy, eat over the sink. | Wed Feb 24 1988 12:46 | 18 |
| Cataclysmic change that can be evoked by man = nuclear war.
A good book, if you are looking to survive either a nuclear war
or survive major and rapid planetary changes is _Survival in to
the 21st Century_. It can be awfully depressing, though, and it
certainly contains its share of controversial approaches to
preparation. There is a rather rigorous body-cleansing regimen put
forth; some of what is within that regimen has been widely debated
in HOLISTIC.
As for the original question...am I preparing for it...my feeling
is that one should generally be prepared for anything and everything,
but I relate that more to a mental attitude than to an attitude
of actually making physical preparations (collecting food, water,
etc). However, my significant other complements me in that he is
making certain survivalist-type plans on the physical level.
Meredith
|
659.21 | | DECWET::MITCHELL | Let's call 'em sea monkeys! | Wed Feb 24 1988 20:00 | 37 |
| REP .19 (Alan)
> How about you? Do you keep spare food and drinking water on hand?
<
When I lived in the S.F. Bay area, I kept bottled water and canned food
on hand (for earthquakes). Now that I do not live in an earthquake-prone
area, I do not keep such supplies on hand.
> But, John, no scientist knows enough to predict when a volcano will
blow ! <
Oh no? Ever hear of Mt. St. Helens?
> I think that all the parallel prophecies are very important, and
dangerous to ignore. <
But they are only "parallel" because they are being interpreted that way. They
could as easily be interpreted any other way.
I love how 99% of all prophecies
are interpreted in retrospect; they are otherwise useless. It's easy to say
after the fact that a gourd of ashes hitting the ground represented the
Hiroshima bomb (never mind that the bomb was exploded *above* the ground). And
now that Mt. St. Helens has gone off (a mountain way outside the geographic
sphere of the Hopi) it has entered the realm of prophetic fulfillment. Prophecy
is what you make of it. Given enough time, just about EVERYTHING comes true.
In visions of another day,
The Hopi prophets watch the skies.
They dream destruction far away,
Yet can't predict their own demise!
John M.
|
659.22 | | LDYBUG::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Thu Feb 25 1988 08:26 | 1 |
| Oh no John,.... not more Vogon Poetry.
|
659.23 | What Do You Do When... | EXIT26::SAARINEN | | Thu Feb 25 1988 10:17 | 34 |
| I think what bothers me about preparing for these Earth Changes
is the problem with, say you institute a survivalble alternative.
You get a underground house in the boonies with air and water
filtration systems, food supplies, communications, batteries
and power supplies. You have gasoline and fuel stocked, with
4-Wheel drive vehicles for mobility and feel psychologically
and physically prepared to survive for the future with your
family.
Now, for me the problem comes to bear, here you have the city
people, the young tough thugs and hoodlums who haven't
prepared so elegantly as you, and want to survive just as
much. You've made for yourself this huge magnetic of sorts to
attract all those people who want what you got, because it
appears that you have prepared to survive and they didn't.
Especially in this extremely live or die situation that millions
of people will be encountering.
What do you do now? Personal Survival above all else to
weather these Earth Changes and do you defend you and your
family against all these people who probably wouldn't stop
at anything in their desperation to survive.
What I'm saying is, did you forget your automatic weapons with
fully loaded clips?
How far does your own Personal Survival Instinct take you to
live another day?
This is so depressing, but I'd appreciate some replys.
-Arthur
|
659.24 | Looks like I got me some gasoline, ay?! | DICKNS::KLAES | Well, I could stay for a bit longer. | Thu Feb 25 1988 10:32 | 5 |
| All I've got to say on this subject is, just remember THE ROAD
WARRIOR...
Larry
|
659.25 | materialist vs. non-materialist | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Thu Feb 25 1988 10:47 | 25 |
|
Well, some of the Native Americans say that the richest person
is the person who can survive comfortably with the least. One
of the preparations I am making, is to take a good wilderness
survival class, and spend some time practicing. It's said that
a person can survive with only a knife, if they know how. (and
can even make their own flint knife!)
Of course there is a world of difference between survival by
stocking material goods, and other possible methods such as
aligning with some spiritual power, or by learning to do without
posessions. I consider all three possibilities quite valid,
and hope to find a good balance.
I think there is a lot to be said for the non-materialist
approach. I am reminded of a few of Jesus's sayings: "Do this
(seek the Kingdom of Heaven) first, and all these other things will
be added unto you." But he also mentions some maidens who are
to keep their lamps ready and filled with oil...
As I said I thing there is a balance to be found here, and
am still *very* interested to hear other people's ideas on whatever
they feel are the realistic preparations that need to be made.
Alan.
|
659.26 | what about the folks "in charge"? | COOKIE::DANIEL | If it's sloppy, eat over the sink. | Fri Feb 26 1988 11:21 | 4 |
| I just had a thought (OH NO! not *another* one!!).
Do you think that our government is already making arrangements
for itself!?!?!?!?
|
659.27 | RE:---->Note 659.26 | EXIT26::SAARINEN | | Fri Feb 26 1988 12:35 | 7 |
|
For the top top officials in government they have underground mountain
hideaways in Virginia.
For you and I they have Subway Stations....
-Arthur
|
659.28 | Can you yodel underground? | BSS::BLAZEK | Dancing with My Self | Fri Feb 26 1988 12:55 | 13 |
| Switzerland has quite an elaborate underground system which
can provide a safe habitat for hundreds of thousands in the
event of a natural disaster. According to Swiss reports,
this would also be effectively functional in the event of a
nuclear war. (They claim they're neutral, but Schwyz has
more underground mountain shelters per capita than any other
country in the world.)
In typical Swiss fashion, guards will require you to provide
a Swiss passport before allowing admittance.
Carla
|
659.29 | There's more. | SCOPE::PAINTER | Imagine all the *people*.... | Fri Feb 26 1988 13:25 | 11 |
|
You can also make out the tank-stoppers tastefully hidden by plantlife
when you travel by train if you're observant enough. Pretty impressive
place - Switzerland.
Oh for some muesli and some coffee right now - preferably at the
base of the Matterhorn in Zermatt while taking a break from skiing.
The mind wanders.....
Cindy
|
659.30 | Oh for a transfer to Geneva... | BSS::BLAZEK | Dancing with My Self | Fri Feb 26 1988 14:09 | 7 |
| If you want muesli, Cindy, stop over for breakfast some
time and I'll pour you a bowl of Zuricky Birchermuesli!
(I get all the good stuff directly imported.)
Carla who_even_has_raclette_and_a_bottle_of_REAL_Kirsch_
clamoring_to_be_consumed...
|
659.31 | Doesn't sound bad for *this* lifetime either | BSS::BLAZEK | Dancing with My Self | Fri Feb 26 1988 14:11 | 8 |
| re: .29 (Cindy)
Haven't we had a similar conversation before??? Maybe we
shared a past life carousing through the Alps and chasing
Swiss bicyclists... ;-)
Carla
|
659.32 | Ah, Switzerland... | JJM::ASBURY | | Fri Feb 26 1988 15:13 | 9 |
| re: .28
Aren't all houses in Switzerland also required to have a bomb shelter
stocked with a certain amount of food and water at all times? I
believe I was told this was the case when visiting a family there
last summer.
-Amy.
|
659.33 | | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Fri Feb 26 1988 15:13 | 24 |
|
Here in Colorado Springs the government has built the NORAD
(North American Air Defense Command) under Cheyenne mountain,
which is just southwest of colorado springs, less than 15 miles
from the DEC plant, as the crow flies. I can see it from here.
This is only for the bigwigs though. There's not room for many
civilians in there.
However, a lot of the prophecies are predicting a lot of
earthquake activity. It seems to me that I wouldn't want to
be in an underground tunnel if there was a quake. Although they
have "padded" the NORAD base to protect against a direct hit,
there are no protections for Colorado Springs, which is right
next door. The Broadmoor neigborhood has been called "Ground zero
estates" by ex-governor Lamm, since it's right at the foot of
Cheyenne mountain.
But, anyway, it seems like the USA government is prepared
only to protect the elite. The Swiss system sounds a lot more
democratic to me. All the more reason for each of us to look
to protect our own future options, since the government is not
going to.
Alan.
|
659.34 | Cal-i-forn-ia, There It Goes ... | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Feb 26 1988 15:24 | 40 |
| RE: .18
John, in science (unlike, e.g., politics) when you are "right" for
the wrong reasons, you are simply wrong.
Yes -- there is no reasonable sense in which California is going to
"fall into the ocean." But *no* we cannot conclude this because
"The shelf that is California is simply too thick to fall into the
ocean."
The latter is plausible sounding nonsense on a par with "The
Continents can't move because they are too large and solid."
Certainly, California, being continental structure, is too thick
to become ocean basin floor in any human time scale, but such a
radical interpretation is hardly required of the phrase.
Inundation of the low-lying, populated areas as a result of
a series of earthquakes could certainly legitimately described
as "falling into the ocean". Very large earthquakes can cause large
scale movement measured in feet, and a drop of a foot or two
would be all that is necessary to cause this disaster. Such
large fault-slips over such a large area is cataclysmic beyond
anything in human history -- but not in geological history.
The reason that we can discount the possibility that California
is going to fall into the ocean is because the plate movement
which causes earthquakes in the area are principally pushing
California northward and slightly *upward* (as the Pacific plate
subducts beneath it) rather than downward. The direction of movment
is only likely to change signficantly in geological rather than human
time. Of course local buckling might cause some limited area (e.g.,
LA) to be flooded, but this *would* be local.
(Didn't I go through this same thing with someone else earlier
in the New Age/Harmonic Convergence discussions? Oh, well, this
*is* DEJAVU after all. :-)
Topher
|
659.35 | the other alternative ... | ERASER::KALLIS | A Dhole isn't a political animal. | Fri Feb 26 1988 15:33 | 12 |
| Re .34 (Topher):
>The reason that we can discount the possibility that California
>is going to fall into the ocean is because the plate movement
>which causes earthquakes in the area are principally pushing
>California northward and slightly *upward* (as the Pacific plate
>subducts beneath it) rather than downward.
The author, Ben Bova, once wrote a story suggesting that everything
_East_ of California would fall into the ocean. Hmm :-)
Steve Kallis, Jy.
|
659.36 | more alternatives than that; | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Fri Feb 26 1988 16:59 | 11 |
|
Continental drift theories are rather recent and not all entirely
worked out. One theory I read (can't remember where, perhaps John
White's "Pole Shift") was that the drift was started when Atlantis
sank, and has been slowing down ever since. (and it does seem to
be slowing down, according to my vaguely remembered reference.) If
this is the case, a large enough event (like the "pole shift" some
prophets have mentioned) might start the continents sliding in new
directions.
Alan.
|
659.37 | | DECWET::MITCHELL | Let's call 'em sea monkeys! | Fri Feb 26 1988 20:29 | 6 |
| RE: .35 (Steve)
There IS nothing east of California!
John M.
|
659.38 | | BSS::BLAZEK | Dancing with My Self | Sun Feb 28 1988 19:46 | 10 |
| re: .28 (Amy)
All houses built after 1950 (or thereabouts) are required
to have an underground shelter. Most Swiss (that I know)
don't particularly stock water or food other than surplus
homemade canned goods, but use the room as a wine cellar.
Priorities *are* priorities, after all...
Carla
|
659.39 | Atlantis and Continental drift. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Feb 29 1988 11:35 | 30 |
| RE: .36
Continental drift theories *are* fairly recent as theories completely
revamping entire major areas of science go (its not *quite* fair
to say that pre-continental drift large-scale geology is to modern
large-scale geology as alchemy is to chemistry). They started to
be taken seriously in the late 60's I believe.
That's long enough for the major outline of the theory to be well
developed and understood.
Strong evidence (indeed, the specific evidence that lead to the
acceptance of continental drift) indicates that it has functioned
for hundreds of millions of years -- much longer than any figure
I have seen proposed for the sinking of Atlantis. Geologists generally
believe that continental drift is as old as the crust -- billions
(milliards for some of you British English speakers) of years.
The force driving continental drift is the convection currents in
the Earth's mantal. As the Earth cools these do weaken. And so
in theory Continental drift is slowing down. But again we are
talking about an effect only measurable over periods of hundreds
of millions of years.
If there was ever an Atlantis which sank beneath the sea (which
in any literal sense, I doubt) than it did so as part of the ongoing
tectonic processes which existed before it and which still exist
now.
Topher
|
659.40 | Also... | DECWET::MITCHELL | Let's call 'em sea monkeys! | Mon Feb 29 1988 22:26 | 8 |
| RE: .36
If you look at a map of the world you can see how the continents fit together
like a puzzle. If Atlantis ever existed (and why people think it did is
beyond me), it should have left a "hole." There isn't one.
John M.
|
659.41 | Balance the ball | NEXUS::MORGAN | Heaven - a perfectly useless state. | Mon Feb 29 1988 23:00 | 17 |
| Reply to .40, John,
Unless of course if there wasn't another continent that sank pushing
up other land masses that caused our continents to separate.
I saw a very interesting computer simulated graphic that showed
how the continents separated. All the continents were on one side
of the planet. I wonder what was on the other side? Water? Were
sea levels different? The Mediterranian was an open basin that somehow
got filled.
I agree with you about California. Part of it is moving northward, not
sinking. It will be a giant island in about 1,000,000 years. Ocean
levels may be different then too so who knows what property prices
will be like. B^)
I hope we're around in a million years!
|
659.42 | Surf's Up... | SHRBIZ::WAINE | Linda | Tue Mar 01 1988 12:09 | 12 |
|
I don't think that California will "sink", but my question is...
If the earthquake is extremely big, what about tidal wave activity?
If a tidal wave was big enough, would it not "appear" that part
of California "sank"??
Just a thought...
Linda
|
659.43 | | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Tue Mar 01 1988 12:32 | 18 |
|
I just ran across another book on this stuff; "The Phoenix Returns"
by Kristina Gale-Kumar. I haven't read much of it yet, but it
seems to be an attempt to correlate all the various predictions.
The symbolism of the Phoenix is interesting, and often seems to
be related to these predicted events.
I don't really know for myself how plausable the California
predictions are. I have a brother who lives there now, and I
decided I won't bring up the topic with him, *unless* (until?)
the warning sequence of events that Cayce predicted (as I outlined
in .1) does begin to happen. If these "warning sequence" events
happen in the order predicted, then I would take the rest of it
more seriously. At that point I will have to make some serious
long distance phone calls. But for now, I am content to wait
and see.
Alan.
|
659.44 | Pangea and Atlantis. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Tue Mar 01 1988 14:07 | 41 |
| RE: .40
John, as you know I don't think that Atlantis ever existed, but
your argument is bogus.
First, as pointed out by someone already, it might not have been
part of Pangea. That all the existing continents happened to come
together at one time is an observation, not a logical necessity.
Pieces which currently don't exist now may have existed then but
not have been part of it.
Second, it might have been on the coast of Pangea, and therefore
our current picture of its outline may be incorrect.
Third, if some unknown mechanism caused Atlantis to sink
cataclysmically that same mechanism may have caused it to rise --
post-pangea -- in the first place.
Fourth, it may not have been a continent in the modern geological
sense.
Fifth, and perhaps most important, the whole neat jig-saw puzzle
view of Pangea is an artifact. The people who are concerned with
these things are concerned with getting them to fit. They use
extensive (legitimate) fudge-factors such as changing water level
subsequent subduction, etc to make the outlines fit. You will
find if you look that many of the maps disagree about what goes
where, yet they all fit. Furthermore, if you compare the outlines
of the pieces you will find that virtually none of them match the
current coastlines in detail. Some of the maps leave rather large
"lakes" rather than trying to stretch things too far.
What is significant about the Pangea hypothesis is not that the
current, much modified pieces fit perfectly; but that various
independent lines of evidence point (e.g., tracing back sea floor
spreading, direction of risidual magnetism in continental lava
flows, matching fossils on distant shores, and apparent animal
migration paths) back to a fit close enough for the fairly broad
fudging that is justified to *make* them fit exactly.
Topher
|
659.45 | dwelling on a point ... | INK::KALLIS | A Dhole isn't a political animal. | Wed Mar 02 1988 10:50 | 17 |
| Re .44 (Topher):
As you know, I also share doubts that Atlantis, as in the myth,
existed. However, to amplify on something said,
>Fourth, it may not have been a continent in the modern geological
>sense.
A perusal of Greek writings shows that their basic early organization
was city-states (Athens, Sparta, etc.). The description of Atlantis
in the Platonic dialogues doesn't sound like an area that's too
large -- more like a big island than a continent.
The cataclysmic disappearance of islands (or their appearance, for
tghat matter) would be more or less unrelated to the Pangea hypothesis.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
659.46 | on the sinking of continents; | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Tue May 10 1988 14:23 | 51 |
| An idea on a possible mechanism that might cause the sinking
(and rising) of continents;
In the "Prophecies of Dejavu Noters" topic I outline a possible
mechanism for polar shifts; when the ice caps grow large enough,
the crust of the earth goes off balance, and the weight of the ice
caps causes the entire crust to realign, with the heaviest part
of the crust, and the ice caps, moving toward the equator by
centrifugal force.
This scenario could also explain the rising or sinking of
Atlantis, Lemuria, etc. There is a rather large equatorial
bulge, so that the Earth's diameter is larger at the equator
than from pole to pole. If a land mass moves over this bulge
it might be raised to a higher altitude. A land mass that
was equatorial before a shift, might sink under the ocean if
it moved farther from the equator, where there was less bulge.
I have been reading "The Earth Changes Update" by Hugh Lynn
Cayce recently, which outlines most of the things Edgar Cayce
said about land movements. He clearly states that Atlantis
was an entire continent stretching between Florida and Gibraltar.
It was said to have sunk in stages, and is predicted to rise
again during the next several years. There is a lot of evidence
that there was once dry land east of Florida, where there have
been discovered stone works under the water, and large 'sinkholes'
that are believed to have once been fresh water lakes. Drill
cores from the mid Atlantic region have shown evidence of the area
having once been above sea level, since there were diatoms (fresh
water life forms) found in the sediments.
Here in my Colorado home, there is beach sand to be found
above 12,000 feet, on the side of Pike's Peak. (I could enter
a whole note on the illogic of geologists explanations of the
evolution of Colorado Springs geology! Their timing of events
is clearly screwed up!) Pikes Peak is believed to be formed
during the Miocene era (quite recent in geological terms) so it
appears that this wole area was under water sometime during the
last 10 million years. This evidence does not agree at all with
the beliefs of the "steady state" geology school, or with those
who believe that the shapes of continents have stayed basically
the same for millions of years.
I have gradually come to the conclusion that many modern
geological theories are entirely wrong; such as "continental drift"
and "ice ages". I believe the evidence is better explained by
the theory that the Earth's crust periodically shifts position.
In each new position, the ice caps form in new areas, causing the
scars (moraines, etc.) that are usually attributed to "ice ages".
Alan.
|
659.47 | RE 659.46 | DICKNS::KLAES | Know Future | Tue May 10 1988 15:09 | 8 |
| Yes, there was plenty of dry land east of Florida at one time;
it was what we know know as Europe, Africa, and Asia, and all the
continents formed one giant continent (roughly 200 million years
ago) called Pangaea, before continental drift started splitting
the land masses apart.
Larry
|
659.48 | I ain't seen it, but I hoid aboudit. | GENRAL::DANIEL | We are the otters of the Universe | Tue May 10 1988 16:41 | 12 |
| Did you ever notice all the waterlike fossils inside of the red rocks at Garden
of the Gods? Fishes, I say. But I'm just me, not an expert in geology.
I heard one theory that there used to be a lot more water on the planet, but a
giant comet came, clashed with Earth, and dried up a lot of her supply.
In my high-school Geology class, we learned about Gondwanaland (spelling??),
which was one great land mass that separated into the seven continents as we
know them now. Could that be as a result of the Great Flood of Noah's time? Or
was the Great Flood, a result of the separation? Or neither?
These, and other questions, perhaps never to be answered at all...
|
659.49 | Fast Frozen | SAHQ::KASPER | Life is like a beanstalk, isn't it... | Tue May 10 1988 17:03 | 6 |
| Somewhere in the replies of this note I read about the unlikelihood of
rapid geologic changes. What could be the explanation for the discovery
of Mammouths in Siberia frozen and preserved in ice - with unchewed food
in their mouths (tropical type, I might add)???
Terry
|
659.50 | Mammothsicles | MARKER::KALLIS | loose ships slip slips. | Tue May 10 1988 17:10 | 12 |
| Re .49 (Terry):
> ......................... What could be the explanation for the discovery
>of Mammouths in Siberia frozen and preserved in ice - with unchewed food
>in their mouths (tropical type, I might add)???
Rapid freezing by mechanisms from alien UFOs. ;-)
Steve Kallis, Jr.
Sorry; that was nigh on irresistible!
|
659.51 | RE 659.48 | DICKNS::KLAES | Know Future | Tue May 10 1988 17:19 | 17 |
| There is a current theory about a planetoid or comet which
struck Earth and was the cause for the extinction of the dinosaurs
65 million years ago, and that this was the reason for several other
major extinctions of species throughout the ages. A single comet
or planetoid could not "dry up" most of Earth's water, and the kind
of celestial object big enough to do it would also obliterate the
entire planet, so obviously it has not happened.
As for the Flood in the Bible, there is no geological evidence
to support a world-wide flood in the relatively recent past, though
it seems the Bible borrowed this story from Greek and Babylonian
myths; and these myths probably came from some big - though not
Earth-encompassing - floods which occured to those civilizations at
one time.
Larry
|
659.53 | dam! | MARKER::KALLIS | loose ships slip slips. | Tue May 10 1988 17:41 | 31 |
| Re .51 (Larry):
> As for the Flood in the Bible, there is no geological evidence
>to support a world-wide flood in the relatively recent past, though
>it seems the Bible borrowed this story from Greek and Babylonian
>myths; and these myths probably came from some big - though not
>Earth-encompassing - floods which occured to those civilizations at
>one time.
Will, there are those who might cite cases to you that'd "prove"
it; though with the rise and fall of land masses, it'd be hard to
convince geologists.
My own pet hyopthesis (not unique). Many thousand years ago, the
Pillars of Hercules were a single mass, behind which was a depression.
This depression, partially filled with water from various rivers,
was sufficiently fertile so that many people settled in it. In
time, the solid mass eroded, and eventually split open, allowing
the Atlantic Ocean to inundate the depression, which became the
Mediterranean Sea. The vast majority of the people who had settled
in this area were killed, but a few straggklers found their way
to the new shores. The Noah story, and that of Deucalion, were
time-distorted accounts of that inundation.
If the Pillars of Hercules were dammed up, the evaporation from
the Mediterranean, I've read, would empty about 2/3 of it before
replacement from the river waters would match the evaporation.
This was calculated when some engineers wewre doing a feasibility
study of constructing a dam for an international hydroelectric station.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
659.54 | mything facts? | ILLUSN::SORNSON | Please adjust your set. | Tue May 10 1988 17:54 | 17 |
| re .51 (Larry) [the link went down just before this reply got entered
as .52]
> As for the Flood in the Bible, there is no geological evidence
> to support a world-wide flood in the relatively recent past, though
> it seems the Bible borrowed this story from Greek and Babylonian
> myths; and these myths probably came from some big - though not
> Earth-encompassing - floods which occured to those civilizations at
> one time.
If you are able to, can you list the types of things that should be
evident if there WAS a world-wide flood in the relatively recent past?
I can't say that I could do so myself without having to do some
research, but it sounds like you have, and it's something I've always
wondered about, but haven't had the time to check out for myself.
-mark.
|
659.55 | I'd like to believe but... | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Tue May 10 1988 18:29 | 148 |
| RE: .46 (Alan)
OK let's take your points one by one.
> <Ice caps destabilizing the Earth's rotation.>
The Earth is *very* big. Everything we are familiar with: the oceans,
the ice caps, the continents, mountains, the atmosphere, etc. is,
relative to the Earth, a tiny, almost unnoticeable skin. The ice
caps are pretty much symmetric around the poles and therefore there
size does not have any "first-order" effect on the axis of rotation.
That is to say, to a good degree of approximation, the centrifugal
force pulls the ice caps towards the equator in all directions equally
and therefore cancels itself out. Second order effects, due to the
asymmetries which exist and to the ability of the caps to exaggerate
a large shift into a larger shift
do not seem to be large enough to be significant. Do the math and
show me wrong, but I would guesstimate that the effects are several
orders of magnitude too small.
> <Continents being raised up by crossing the equatorial bulge>
The equatorial bulge effects both the ocean and the continents.
"Sea-level" at the equator is higher at the equator, as measured
from the center of the earth, than it is at the poles. As the
continents are raised up as they move over the equator so is the
ocean -- relative to each other they stay the same.
> <Dry land east of Florida>
How far east? Who believes that the sinkholes were once lakes?
What stone works? (We're not talking about the large stone blocks
which were shown to have been dumped from a quarry barge during
a storm, are we?) No modern geologist argues that continents don't
sink (slowly) to form continental shelf, and vice versa.
> <Diatoms in mid-Atlantic>
Diatoms are fresh-water organisms? Diatoms exist both in sea-water
and fresh-water but are far more common in the former. One of the
geological indicators of deep-sea sediments is a high proportion of
diatoms.
I'll give the benefit of the doubt and assume that what was meant
was that fresh-water diatoms were found in mid-Atlantic sediments.
The modern picture of the formation of the Atlantic starts with
North America and Europe joined what is now the edges of their
respective continental shelves. A rift formed between them and
new crust started to form along that rift pushing them apart.
Initially the effect would be similar to the Red Sea today, which
is a relatively young rift. The sediments laid down at this
early stage would contain a lot of fresh-water sediments: lots of
sand, dust and fresh-water organisms (including diatoms). As
the rift enlarged, these edges of the deep sea (which *are* deep
sea, mind you) would continue to receive a high proportion of
fresh-water sediment. Relatively recently discovered phenomena
-- strong currents, or rivers, on the floor of the ocean -- would
in places displace some of this sediments further towards the
center. Nowhere would I expect to see *no* sign of fresh-water
sediments. As I understand it, however, one would only expect to
find diatoms, fresh-water or salt-water, only in recent sediments
in very deep sea water, since under pressure sea-water slowly dissolves
the silicates which diatoms' shells are made of.
If you have evidence that sediments close to the mid-Atlantic ridge
contain fresh-water derived sediments in excess of what can be
explained by the standard model of continental drift, please cite
it (Really! There is nothing I enjoy more than holes in current
theory. A good anomaly makes my day. But it has to be real and
well substantiated.). From what I know of him, Mr. Cayce is sincere
in his beliefs but his belief in anomalous sediments does not compel
my belief. Give me a reason to believe it other than that it would
stick in the craw of the scientific establishment.
> <Beach sand on Pike's Peak>
First off, according to the dictionary I have here, the Miocene period
*ended* 10 million years ago and started *25* million years ago.
Furthermore, that Pike's Peak was formed during the Miocene does
not mean that the ground it was formed from only appeared above
the ocean when it was formed (I'm assuming that it *was* formed
during the Miocene). Therefore the correct deduction is not
"It appears that this whole area was under water sometime during
the last 10 million years." but the opposite, "It appears that this
whole area was under water some time more than 10 million years ago".
According to the article I just read in the Brittanica (not the most
up-to-date source, but handy) the youngest sediments which make up
the Rockies are judged, primarily on the basis of fossils, to have
been laid down from 550 million to 225 million years ago, during
the Paleozoic and early Mesozoic eras. Which is a bit earlier than
"during the last 10 million years."
Current geological theories, have the Pacific plate colliding with
North America and subducting under it. This action has "crumpled"
up the west coast of North America to form the Rockies (much simplified
description). This started in the middle Mesozoic era and continues
to this day. Before that, what is now the Rocky Mountains was
continental shelf -- sea floor.
Once again, if you can substantiate errors in the current geological
picture of your area, I am very interested. But watch out for sign
errors and inaccurate geological dates.
> <Crustal shift vs continental drift and ice ages>
There was once a fair body of evidence for crustal shift, as well as
the sinking and raising of vast continental "land bridges". Virtually
all of these anomalies are very well explained by continental drift.
There is now an incredible amount of evidence for continental drift.
Anyone who wants to replace it has to explain (or at least make
it plausible that a alternate explanations can be found) for a wide
number of different phenomena, including the shapes of the continents,
the relations between the rocks and fossils on either side of oceans,
earthquakes, the form of island chains such as Hawaii, the abrupt
transitions in geology in Northern California, the age and magnetic
patterns in the mid-Atlantic ridge, the geology of Yellowstone park,
the magnetic patterns in continental rocks, the distribution of
volcanoes, what causes mountain building, metamorphic rocks, and
last, but not least, the measured movements of the continents relative
to each other (and that list is off the top of the head of someone
only peripherally interested in Geology).
Similarly for the ice ages. There is an incredible amount of
evidence for the ice ages and their timing. Various measurements
of sediment rates, oxygen ratios, as well as geological traces
are all consistent with ice ages. Your own theory of what triggers
the crustal shifts require a strong cooling trend, (i.e., an ice
age). Otherwise ice will not accumulate at the poles but will
simply continue to calve off icebergs at the edges and maintain
a steady state (actually, today the balance is towards a recession
of the caps -- i.e., ice is being lost faster than it is accumulating).
I have seen some claims of data which argues for world-wide
catastrophe. Things like tropical vegetation in the stomachs of
mammoths frozen in the tundra (but even in a catastrophic freeze,
why would so clearly a cold adapted animal be eating tropical
vegetation). I have yet to see any of these substantiated, however.
Once again, I'll buy it if I can get evidence for it from a reliable
source. The "ordinary glacial" features seem to be very well
explained by extensive ice sheets and could be explained, though
less cleanly by (physically a priori very unlikely) catastrophic
crustal shifts. Give me some substantial facts which can be explained
by the latter but not the former and I'll be on your side.
Topher
|
659.56 | The Biblical Flood | CIMNET::PIERSON | rails 'r' us | Tue May 10 1988 19:48 | 13 |
| re: the Biblical Flood
It was my understanding that there is a noticeable layer of
sediment, indicating catastrophic flooding, in the "mideast"
(Iran/Iraq/Syria?), the "fertile crescent". This would not have
been a literally world wide event, "world" for an ancient culture
sometimes had a narrower perspective. I believe the date match
was within reason of the Biblical Flood.
Anybody else remeber something along these lines?
thanks
dave pierson
|
659.57 | Comments... | MCIS2::SHURSKY | | Wed May 11 1988 11:21 | 45 |
| re: Topher
There was an MIT hack back when the Hancock (or was it the Pru?)
building was going up. Calculations were devised that purported
to show that when completed the building was completed it would
change the moment of inertia of the earth causing it to leave its
orbit around the sun and predicting much mayhem therefrom. :-)
re: ? (Steve)
Did you catch a TV (Nova?) segment on some findings in the
Mediterranean? As usual I was only half paying attention while
reading the paper or something, but there seems to be core sampling
evidence that supports the theory that Gibralter was dammed at one
point. This "dam" "broke" (sea rising or land subsidence or both)
and the area known as the Mediterranean went from being a "dead
inland sea" to a sea (process is supposed to have happened several
times, I think). I believe this would have been before the time of
civilization though. Remember, all the time man has been on the
face of the earth is just a blink of the eye when geologic events
are discussed. There are a few catastrophic events that could
have caused some ancient myths...
re: others
I caught a blurb in the Lawrence Eagle/Tribune that said there was
a new theory of Atlantis. Apparently there was a major volcano
in the Mediterranean that blew up and made Krakatoah (sp?) look
like a kid's fire cracker. (I haven't heard of this one before and
would expect that I would have since I have a general interest.)
This explosion would have caused a tsunami that would have wiped
out any number of Med civilizations (raising my suspicions about
whether it is in fact true). The one they thought might be Atlantis
was the Minoan civilization. Except they found that as best they
could tell the Minoan civilization declined and/or died 50 years
after this supposed explosion. The article did not provide sufficient
information for a me to have high confidence in its content.
Stan
P.S. Krakatoah was a volcanic island that blew up (sea water and
hot magma combining undergroud to create a massive explosion) with
the force of a few megaton atomic bombs. A date of 1868 or 1888
seems to be floating around in memory but don't quote me. All that
was left was a small percentage of the island when the smoke cleared.
|
659.58 | Some responses to Stan. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed May 11 1988 11:46 | 32 |
| RE: .57 (Stan)
> <MIT hack>
I think they had an error somewhere in their calculations.
> <NOVA on the dry Mediterranean>
That was an exceptionally good NOVA. That the Mediterranean was
dry until about 10,000 years ago is now pretty much a mainstream
geological belief. The entire thing apparently filled up in a
matter of years (<100). When I first heard of this the possibility
that the biblical Flood was a cultural memory of this event occurred
to me as well. It is a dramatic thought, and just barely possible,
but an "ordinary" flood which grew in the telling seems more likely.
> <Krakatoahoid source of Atlantis>
You're right, it wasn't reliable -- this is hardly a new theory,
its at least 25 years old (more I think). Steve has discussed it
in the Atlantis topic. What's new is some more data as to the date
of the eruption (ash in Greenland ice cores? Something like that).
This puts on firmer footing the belief that the Thieren eruption
predated the colapse of the Minoan civilization by about 50 years,
which already had a fair amount of evidence for it. It is now thought
likely that the erruption weakened the Minoans, wiped out one of
their major trading cities (on the island itself) and perhaps directly
resulted in a loss of political influence on the periphery of their
empire. In their weakened state, 50 years later, something else
finally did them in.
Topher
|
659.59 | Assorted dates | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed May 11 1988 13:52 | 12 |
| The Vogon News Service for April 15th gave an EXACT date for
the eruption of Thera/Santorini: 1628 bce.
Anyone know where that came from?
Well before the Thera tsunami came the flooding of the Mediterranean
basin, and the Flandrian Transgression, but both are VERY prehistoric.
The early Egyptians had lovingly recorded the dates and extents
of every flood between about 2700 and 2100 bce, and they don't mention
any major non-Nile flood during *that* period.
Ann B.
|
659.60 | RE 659.59 | DICKNS::KLAES | Know Future | Wed May 11 1988 13:58 | 8 |
| The Mediterranean flood might have come down from oral legends
by those who lived and survived in the area at the time. There
may not have been civilizations in Eurasia and Africa 10,000 years
ago, but the people were Homo sapiens, and the first civilizations
were only 5,000 years away.
Larry
|
659.61 | | ASIC::EDECK | this space for rent | Wed Jun 01 1988 16:21 | 21 |
|
ref. frozen Siberian Mammoths...(my own theory)
There are peat bogs in England that preserve for thousands of years
animals that have fallen into them (including bronze age humans);
the anarobic conditions and alkalinity of the bogs preserve tissue
(no oxygen, so decay from microorganisms is slowed down; the alkalinity
causes the fats to change to something quite like soap which is
fairly stable).
The climate of Siberia was know to be boggy grasslands at that time
(pollen analysis). It seems reasonable to assume that the mammoths fell
into the bogs, drowned before they could finish their last meal,
and were preserved in the same way as the Brittish specimens. The
bogs were frozen in the next ice age and...PRESTO! Swanson's Frozen
Mammoth TV Dinner!
Ed E.
|
659.62 | Flash freezing | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Jun 02 1988 13:24 | 14 |
| Avram Davidson had a different theory. He noticed that it was
*only* mammoths who were found. He therefore postulated that
they would find their way into small depressions, and not be
able to get out. Other animals could escape because they could
jump. So, there the mammoth would stay, eating buttercups in
this protected area, until a blizzard came howling down, and froze
the beast solid, because he could not escape.
The flaw in the peat bog theory is that the flesh of the thawed
animals is often fresh enough to eat, which would not be the case
for a body preserved in a tannic acid stew. (I think that's the
preservation method.)
Ann B.
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659.63 | "greenhouse effect" update | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Thu Jun 23 1988 13:56 | 15 |
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Last night on NPR news, they said that there is a 99% probability
that the drought in the midwest is being caused by changes brought
on by the greenhouse effect. There is a corresponding 1% probability
that the weather is just a random fluctuation. There has been
a 3/4 degree rise in temperature this year, worldwide, where a 1/4
change is normal.
It has been said that the harmonic convergence last August 17th was
the start of the five years of "The Great Purification" that
was prophecised as a time of great changes (ecological, and social)
in our planet. Could it be that the drought is the first real
evidence of such momentous changes? I believe it is.
Alan.
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659.64 | Just noticing it, rather than just happening. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu Jun 23 1988 15:33 | 22 |
| RE: .63
Not quite... There is a 99% chance that this is a real long-term
climate change rather than a random hiccough of the weather. That
this change is due to the greenhouse effect is somewhat lower,
say, 95%.
This is a change which has been going on for 10 years at least.
The climatologists are learning more, have better tools, and the
climate change is continuing to grow. That it was spotted now
rather than 5 years ago says as much or more about our technology
for detecting such things than anything about what is occuring.
Assuming that it is the Greenhouse effect, it started 500 years
or so ago (at least) and has steadily increased and steadily
increased its rate of increase since that time. Ten years ago
it reached a point where retrospectively we can say that it was
clearly showing significant effects on the weather, and now we
can say something about what is happening *now* by looking at
the past decade and before.
Topher
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659.65 | Ah ha, yes, but... | USAT05::KASPER | Life is like a beanstalk, isn't it... | Thu Jun 23 1988 17:24 | 14 |
| RE: .64 (Topher)
Right. But... with respect to the harmonic convergence and that this
is supposed to be a time of cleansing (or whatever) I think relates to
our becoming aware of the changes at this time even though the earth
and it's atsmophere have been changing for a while (by our perception of
time, geologically a second or two ago).
In the interest of quantum physics, since it is only recently that we
have observed the change, was it really going on when we were unaware???
(just trying to throw this out of perspective a bit... :') )
Terry
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659.66 | Pattern implicit in every part. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Jun 24 1988 11:47 | 17 |
| RE: .65 (Terry)
> In the interest of quanum physics, ...
You don't have to *notice* something to "observe" it in the quantum
mechanical sense -- even in the most consciousness based
interpretations.
If you see a tree -- even if you don't pay any attention and even
if you fail to notice that it is part of a pattern -- the forest
has been observed.
If you feel the temperature -- even if you don't notice that it
is "too d**n hot" and even if you fail to notice that there have
been a lot of hot summer days -- the climate change has been observed.
Topher
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659.67 | Any obser is seeing the whole, recognized or not. | WRO8A::GUEST_TMP | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Fri Jun 24 1988 20:30 | 7 |
| re: -.1
Would this be considered to be similar to determining the
whole from any part of a hologram? Sounds that way to me, anyway.
Frederick
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659.68 | Can't be coincidence... | USAT05::KASPER | Life is like a beanstalk, isn't it... | Mon Jun 27 1988 00:04 | 28 |
| RE: .66 (Topher)
Yes, I agree that we do implicitly "observe" more than we see. Our
subconscious minds see to that, but back to note .63, I think that it
is more than coincidence that the *affects* of this gradual climatic
change have only been significant (drought) to us recently. Also, there
have been to many other *major* events for this to all be unrelated
(I think, anyway), such as:
October 87 stock market crash
Several big time explosions (Nevada, Louisiana, Virginia)
AIDS
Shake up in the areospace industry by the Challenger disaster
Russia's 'Glosnos' (sp).
Chernobyl
Increase in psychic/spiritual intrest by more and more people (ie, DEJAVU)
Oh yes, and the discovery that Elvis is alive! ;') ;') ;') ;')
Too much myth and lore seem to point to this time and the events occuring
within it to ignore or accept as coincendence. I don't know what I'll do
if it's all true; I'm not a survivalist or anything like that so I'm not
running around preparing for who know's what. (It's late and I'm starting
to ramble...).
Anyway, I'm keeping my eyes (all three) open and my ear to the ground.
Terry
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