The Forum Site - Join the conversation
Forums: Art & Literature:
Literature

The Day the Earth Nearly Died.

Reply to Topic
AuthorMessage
oldways On May 03, 2005




Practising Voodoo in, Haiti
#1New Post! Mar 20, 2005 @ 12:58:04
The Day the Earth Nearly Died
by D.S. Allan and J. B. Delair
Book Review by Richard G. Allen.


A must reading for anyone wishing to understand the history of the solar system, the earth, and our civilization, is the book by two English scientists, D.S. Allan and J. B. Delair. It is called, When the Earth Nearly Died. This book is a scientific treatment of an event that occurred approximately eleven thousand years ago that very nearly destroyed the earth and it's inhabitants. This event changed the earth's enviroments entirely. It also affected other planets and their satellites, changing their rotations, orbits, and atmospheres. Our earth is still recovering from it's effect. Apparently Mars did not recover from this event. The last comment is a conclusion that I have drawn, as the book does not purport to draw this conclusion.

The book, however, gives compelling evidence of a world wide, and solar system wide catastrophic disaster that almost wiped out every living thing on earth. These two scientists give strong evidence that debris from an exploding star, a nova, intersected our solar system about eleven thousand years ago. For those of us who are puzzled as to what happened to the fabled Atlantis, and the civilizations that built the pryamids at Giza, and the structures on Mars and the moon, this book may answer that question.
earz On March 12, 2017




ask me, United Kingdom
#2New Post! Mar 20, 2005 @ 13:22:42
ok??
oldways On May 03, 2005




Practising Voodoo in, Haiti
#3New Post! Mar 25, 2005 @ 13:20:34
Posting for postings sake again i see? I will bet that you never even read what i wrote.
earz On March 12, 2017




ask me, United Kingdom
#4New Post! Mar 26, 2005 @ 11:50:56
i did....kinda..i read the last paragraph...no i did actually read it this time!!!! i just didnt take in the information
shaggyjebus On August 26, 2008

Deleted



Goodlettsville, Tennessee
#5New Post! Mar 27, 2005 @ 01:15:25
Hmm . . . i guess this rules out zombies, doesn't it? Dammit, another mark against my "zombie-theory."
solowe1970 On April 01, 2010




Toms River, New Jersey
#6New Post! Apr 01, 2010 @ 16:06:12
Since the age of this supernova is 11,500 years it would take debris over 800 years to reach the earth at light speed.(if it were even possible to travel at light speed.) Material from the Vela supernova, therefore is still about 600 light years from earth. Humans would see the supernova long before the debris reaches us----and in fact if this debris is going to hit us it is still thousands of years away. So much for the theories in this book
TooOldToThink On September 30, 2022




Reno, Nevada
#7New Post! Sep 27, 2022 @ 15:15:16
At 1/25th the speed of light, or approx.27,000 miles per hour, it would take about 1,000 years to travel from the Vela Supernova to Earth, disappearing into the Sun, as suggested.

I am looking for students/post graduates who may have an interest in pursuing further research, using advanced mathematics and geological records to possibly prove the Earth/Vega collusion, Earth's shifting axis of rotation and the Great Flood.
TooOldToThink On September 30, 2022




Reno, Nevada
#8New Post! Sep 27, 2022 @ 16:28:33
opps. The speed above was about 2,700,000 miles per hour, not 27,000, as stated in error above.
Reply to Topic<< Previous Topic | Next Topic >>

1 browsing (0 members - 1 guest)

Quick Reply
Be Respectful of Others

      
Subscribe to topic prefs

Similar Topics
    Forum Topic Last Post Replies Views
New posts   Astronomy
Thu Aug 09, 2012 @ 01:38
6 1845
New posts   News & Current Events
Mon Jul 29, 2013 @ 04:33
1 780
New posts   Random
Thu May 14, 2009 @ 09:24
7 637
New posts   Religion & Philosophy
Mon Jun 09, 2008 @ 02:03
1 521
New posts   Rants & Raves
Sun May 07, 2006 @ 09:57
5 693