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evidence of a recent poleshiftRegardless of what caused
the shift, the poles would be relocated and climates everywhere would change dramatically.
Lands of ice would melt and cause incredible floods. The new poles would freeze
over, with the intense cold instantly killing life. Deserts would gain moisture;
rainforests would dry up. Flora and fauna would need to adapt to the new conditions
or become extinct. If all the regions of our planet
previously had different climates, and the transition had been violent, then we
would expect some evidence to have been found. Here is a brief sample: Frozen
MuckIn Alaska thick frozen deposits of soil, boulder,
plant and animal exist, commonly known as "muck". Prof. Frank C. Hibben of the
University of New Mexico described these deposits: "In
many places, Alaskan muck is packed with animal bones and debris in trainload
lots. Bones of mammoths, mastodons, several kind of bison, horses, wolves, bears
and lions tell a story of a faunal population. within this frozen mass lie the
twisted parts of animals and trees intermingled with lenses of ice and layers
of peat and mosses. It looks as though in the midst of some cataclysmic catastrophe
of ten thousand years ago the whole Alaskan world of living animals and plants
was suddenly frozen in mid-motion like a grim charade.twisted and torn trees are
piled in splintered masses . at least four considerable layers of volcanic ash
may be traced in these deposits, although they are extremely warped and distorted"[14] This
suggests that although volcanoes were erupting, other forces were required to
dismember these animals - with mighty floods and hurricanes being the most likely.
This
is just a small portion of my online book, Survive 2012 - a look into possible
ways our world might end, and how to survive. Available in bookstores sometime
before 2012, fingers-crossed... | Rancho La Brea tar
pitsThese pits in the heart of Los Angeles are one of
the richest sources of fossils discovered to date. More than 565 species all
somehow got stuck in the tar (asphalt to be precise) over tens of thousands of
years, fossilising all the time. Well, that's what the experts at the George
C. Page Museum would have us believe, but they fail to explain the incredible
density of animals that "got stuck" there. During the first University of California
excavations in 1906, they found a "bed of bones" which contained over seven hundred
sabre-toothed tiger skulls. These combined with wolf skulls averaged twenty per
cubic yard.[15]
Almost more bones than tar. They are not the bones of animals that merely got
stuck and waited to die. They are "broken, mashed, contorted and mixed in a most
heterogeneous mass"[16],
just like in the muck of Alaska. And we mustn't overlook the fossilised birds
that have been dug up, 100,000 of them, including over 138 species, 19 of which
are extinct. The George C. Page Museum suggests that the 3,000 birds that are
predators and scavengers may have been attempting to feed on other trapped animals,
when they themselves got stuck. As sensible as this idea sounds, it fails to
explain the presence of the further 97,000 birds that were non-carnivorous. Or
three species of fish! At the end of the last ice
age (circa 10,000 BC) many North American species became extinct, including: mammoths,
camels, Pre-Columbian horses, ground sloths, peccaries, antelopes, elephants,
rhinoceroses, giant armadillos, tapirs, sabre-toothed tigers and giant bison.
All of these animals are relatively large. Did they all become trapped in pits
of asphalt? Was it the warmer weather that killed them? If so, could they not
have shifted north? Or were they wiped out by a
terrible catastrophe? Frozen Mammoths "Fossil
bones are astonishingly abundant in frozen ground of Alaska, but articulated[*] bones are scarce, and complete skeletons,
except for rodents that died in their burrows, are almost unknown . the dispersal
of the bones is as striking as their abundance and indicates general destruction
of soft parts prior to burial."[17] Meanwhile
in Siberia, mammoths were being wiped out in a similar manner. Massive graveyards
of their remains have been mined for ivory tusks. It has been estimated that
more than half a million tons of mammoth tusks were buried along Siberia's Arctic
coastline[18], which equates to roughly five
million mammoths. Several dozen frozen mammoth carcasses have been found with
the flesh still intact. They died suddenly. In their stomachs can be found undigested
vegetation, including grass, bluebells, wild beans and buttercups[19]
- food typically available in the summer. Scientists examining them have concluded
that three of the mammoths died of asphyxiation. The cause of death of the others
has not been determined. Regardless of cause, they
froze within days of dying, and when unfrozen the flesh has been fresh enough
to feed to dogs. With the previous pole positioned at Hudson Bay (see below),
the North Siberian coastline would have had the same latitude as Japan does today,
well outside of the Arctic Circle. But when the poles shifted, the climate would
have rapidly changed, from a summer savannah where mammoths munched on buttercups,
to a frozen wasteland. But wait a minute; weren't
the woolly mammoths suited to living in a cold climate? They are described
as woolly due to their hairy coat, but this is only hair, greaseless hair.
To help protect them from the cold, all of today's Arctic mammals have glands
that make their hair oily to retain warmth - the mammoths had no such gland.
Although thicker, a mammoth's hair is the same as that of elephants, and they
live in the tropical regions. Many animals found in equatorial jungles also have
thick hair, the tiger being one such example. Anyone still unconvinced could
consider this - bones of tigers, rhinoceroses and antelope were found alongside
the mammoths, and these are obviously not Arctic creatures. Bone
Caves"The great problem for geological theories to
explain is that amazing phenomenon, the mingling of the remains of animals of
different species and climates, discovered in exhaustless quantities in the interior
parts of the earth so that the exuviae of those genera which no longer exist at
all, are found confusedly mixed together in the soils of the most northerly latitudes
. . . The bones of those animals which can live only in the torrid zone are buried
in the frozen soil of the polar regions."[20] All around the globe
there are caves which are full of bones. Many of these contain the remains of
animals that would not have normally existed alongside each other. One such cave,
at Oreston, near Plymouth, England contained mammoths, rhinoceroses, bears, lions
and reindeer. Kent's cave in nearby Torquay yielded, amongst another things,
the bones of sabre-toothed tigers. A cave near Settle,
in West Yorkshire, contains the remains of the hippo, rhino, mammoth, bison, hyena
and other animals. They are buried under twelve feet of clay deposits and the
cave is 1450 feet above sea level. Charles Lyell speculated that:
"The hippopotami issued from North African rivers, such as
the Nile, and swam northward in summer along the coasts of the Mediterranean,
or even occasionally visited islands near the shore. Here and there they may have
landed to graze or browse, tarrying awhile, and afterwards continuing their course
northward.. to the Somme, Thames or Severn, making timely retreat to the south
before the snow and ice set in."[21] Yet,
according to his Theory of Uniformity we should be able to observe hippos doing
the same thing today! So, what could have caused hippo bones to be found deep
inside English caves? They may indeed have lived in England, but hippos are not
known to climb mountains by choice. They could have been hiding from the cataclysm,
sharing the cave with terrified hyenas and bison. Or their bodies, dismembered
by a violent cataclysm, may have washed up there, as part of a concurrent great
flood. It is reasonable to say that these two ideas are more sound than hippos
going on a summer holiday! In China, near the village
of Choukoutien, among the animals found in caves were a porcupine, tiger, woolly
rhinoceros, camel, elephant, baboon, ostrich and a species of tortoise. They
are not of the same habitat - the bones have been somehow gathered up and dumped
in the caves.[22]
What forces of nature could do such a thing? In Sicilian
caves were found hippopotami, hyenas, lions, Megatherium, rabbits, bears
and elephants.[23] On Kotelnoi Island, in the Arctic Circle above
Siberia, where "neither shrubs, nor trees, nor bushes exist", are found the bones
of elephants, buffaloes, horses and rhinoceroses.[24]
Similar evidence is available worldwide - proof of destruction at levels we dare
not imagine to be possible. Arctic Coral and Water LiliesSpitsbergen
(now known as Svalbard) is an island in the Arctic Ocean, just eleven degrees
from the North Pole, to the north of Norway. It was uninhabited until the 1890s
when a mining colony was established there. For almost six months of winter there
is no sunlight, yet fossilised plants have been found there, including pines,
firs, elms, swamp-cypress and water lilies.[25]
[26] Regardless of
climate change, these cannot grow anywhere without regular sunlight. At some
time in the past, Spitsbergen must have been further away from the pole. Further
evidence comes from Soviet archaeologists who have discovered prehistoric cave
drawings of deer and whales, as well as axes fashioned from mammoth tusks. Reef
corals have been found deep within the Arctic Circle, on the islands of Ellesmere
(Canada) and Spitsbergen. Under snow now, they must have originally grown in
a tropical region.[27]
Coral requires a minimum temperature of 64° Fahrenheit to grow, which means either
a tropical location, or somewhere outside the tropics where warm currents bring
tropical waters into higher latitudes (Japan, South Africa, and Bermuda for example).[28] At
the opposite pole, Antarctica, Ernest Shackleton found coal beds within 200 miles
of the South Pole. The Byrd expedition of 1935 uncovered fossils that were later
identified as tree ferns, as well as the footprint of a "mammallike reptile".[29] At both ends of
the globe, places which are currently the coldest on earth, we find evidence of
warmth equivalent to that of latitudes at least 30 degrees closer to the equator.
The Weight of IceThere is a lot of ice
in the polar regions. Antarctica has ice kilometres deep. The weight of this
ice, estimated at nineteen quadrillion[30]
tons, will surely be compacting the land below, sinking it lower than before the
ice existed. If this mass of ice were to have occurred anywhere else on land,
a depression would result. Take a look at a map of the world and see if you can
spot an area that may have sunk - a circular area, crushed down to sea level or
lower. I found two that immediately stood out - Hudson Bay and the Gulf of Mexico. Hudson
Bay in NorthEast Canada is a large inland sea covering 730,380 sq km, yet
has a rather shallow average depth of just 130 metres. It was the epicentre of
the North American ice sheet during the last Ice Age, which extended as far south
as Ohio. North West of Hudson Bay the subsoil is permanently frozen. Halfway
between this region and the current North Pole is Greenland, the interior of which
is covered in ice all year long. This is to be expected if it was within the
previous polar circle as well as the current one - it never had a chance to melt. Hudson
Bay is roughly 30 degrees south of the North Pole, and the Gulf of Mexico a similar
distance south again. These spots would fit a model of regular uni-directional
shifts. If the shift had a more random nature then other previous polar locations
could include a large depression in Africa called the Sudan Basin. It is littered
with waterways, which have no apparent connection to each other, nor with the
ocean. It contains Lake Chad, which originally covered 300,000 square kilometres,
but is now less than one thirtieth of that size and is still shrinking. The
first two locations just noted are diametrically opposite regions of the Southern
Ocean, areas where similar depressions in land cannot occur. Opposite Lake Chad
is the South West Pacific, again devoid of major land masses. Recent
Extinction of Large Quadrupeds "True
extinction (end of a phyletic lineage without phyletic replacement) has occurred
throughout the history of life on earth. Among the terrestrial vertebrates, the
fossil evidence suggests two striking episodes of extinction: one at the Mesozoic-tertiary
transition saw the extinction of the last dinosaurs, the other at the Pleistocene-recent
transition saw the sudden dramatic disappearance of large mammals in most but
not all parts of the world."[31] "We
live in a zoologically impoverished world from which all the hugest, and fiercest,
and strangest forms have recently disappeared . yet it is surely a marvellous
fact, and one that has been sufficiently dwelt upon, this sudden dying out of
so many large Mammalia, not in one place only but over half the land surface of
the globe."[32] In
North America an estimated 40 million animals died at the end of the last ice
age (12,000 years ago). Many of the mammals became extinct, especially the larger
ones. The Americas were home to a range of very large mammals, such as the Megatherium
(5.5 metre ground sloth), Glyptodon (4 metre giant armadillo), mammoths,
sabre-toothed tigers and horses. Gradualists, who
accept that climate change could not have been the sole cause, are puzzled as
to how these extinctions happened. For example, we know that post-Columbian horses
thrive today in the same areas where fossils of their extinct cousins are found.
The problem is made more difficult when we look at southern Africa, which contains
many similar climatic zones, yet lacks the recent extinction of large mammals
- large mammals that are obviously less agile than other species, less suited
to sudden disasters. The Smilodon (sabre-toothed tiger) for example, while
being smaller in size than the African lion, was twice as heavy[33].
Imagine if a concrete apartment building had a variety of animal species as tenants,
and, as we often see on television, it was detonated. Which species could possibly
survive? Giraffes? Sloths? Humans? Or smaller beings like a rat, ant or cockroach.
Or in the case of a flood, which animals are unable to scale steep slopes and
escape the rising waters? The poor Megatherium (which weighed 3-4 tons)
would not have had a chance.
Megatherium |
Glyptodon |
INVESTIGATE - not online - Stuart,
Anthony. 1986. "Who (or what) killed the giant armadillo?" New Scientist.
17: 29-31. Grab
a globe and find the southern coast of Nigeria. On the opposite side is Kiribati
in the Pacific Ocean. If the North Pole's previous position was at Hudson Bay,
then these two places are roughly the fulcrum points of the last pole shift.
Place a finger at each position and see how you can swivel the North Pole to where
Hudson Bay is today. This "line of most movement" continues down through the
United States and along the west coast of South America, across Antarctica, the
Indian Ocean, SouthEast Asia, China and Siberia. All points along this line would
have shifted 30 degrees in latitude. The two fulcrum points are the only two
spots on the globe that didn't change latitude. The closer to the fulcrum, the
less the change. Closer to the "line of most movement" equals more change. The
extinctions of 10,000 years ago mostly occurred along the "line of most movement",
along with major geology upheavals, such as the rising of the Andes mountain range.
I suggest that during global cataclysms, at locations along the "line of most
movement", there is a correlation between the size of animals and their extinction.
Discuss Survive
2012 at our forumGive the author your thoughts, and discuss any 2012
ideas with others, at 2012 Forum |
Comments from Visitors
Crystal: Yes, all very interesting! Another convincing check for confirmation lies within the geological studies showing the multitude of magnetic changes that have occurred. (19.04.2004, 11:33)
oblong: Death Valley is below sea-level; (03.06.2004, 17:03)
Rob Bast: But is Death Valley big enough to contain a pole worth of ice? (03.06.2004, 19:00)
Rene: N2S or S2N period ~ 467 000 y
- shifttime: cloud cover increase, temp dn, atm ioniz up, preshiftt.: clear, rel.-y warmer, dry
- not before 2020. ! no calibr. data (21.09.2004, 07:59)
mud: no calib data indeed. (28.09.2004, 00:02)
DENNIS EMERINE: Marlin, large sea turles, boxer squid,have been found in the last couple of years in alaska. I know i talked to the fishermen when i was up there in alaska in 2002!!! I am deeply interesed in this material. BEside the 9.o on the ricker scale on the 27 of dec. there was a 8.1 near the south pole on dec. 25. Contact me i am into Amateur radio {ham radio} n8ppr (30.12.2004, 20:21)
Jim McPherson: Rapid pole shifts go hand in hand with the many different "great flood" stories that have come down to us from native cultures all across the globe. Picture this. Uneven ice buildup near the poles, such as Greenland, causes the crust to suddenly shift as these unbalanced ice masses head for the equatorial bulge in the planet. The land moves but the oceans tend to stay in place due to inertia, so the oceans wash up onto the land. Charles Eserhut in his 1986 book,CAREEN estimates this shift could happen in a matter of just hours, which translates into the land slamming under the oceans at hundreds of miles per hour. Think about it, the flood stories seem false because there just isn't enough water on earth for mere rain to flood the mountains, but if the poles shifted this way there might be tsunamis thousands of feet high! This also explains all the hokey "ice ages" our "scientists' talk about but never can explain how "The whole earth got really cold, then warm again, repeatedly." Places got cold when they were close to the poles and got warm when they were near the equator. Makes perfect sense. The real puzzel to figure out is why "scientists" are so pointedly publicly ignoring this theory. One guess is that it has to do with all the deep underground complexes which the US, Russia and others have and are building. When the time comes the insiders will have shelter while the rest of us below 6,000 feet of elevation or so are washed away. (30.01.2005, 18:50)
vaughan cail: i think the question that needs to be asked is, where will the axis of the shift be. if we can learn this we can determine the safe zones to be in during the shift. but then of course that could lead to calamity with the rush of people to those areas (provided that we can determine the date of the event). rapid international travel will be impossible after the event as most of the airports may be destroyed. a great deal of co-operation will be required to protect people from secondary effects (tsunami etc), and continued survival after the event. the new world is the one that is supposed to survive, i thank the universe that i live in australia. (22.02.2005, 23:26)
Craig D. E.: When the pole shift occurs The earth will see rapid changes as you know. From what I have gathered in my own research we will see extreme quakes (most intence between tectonic plates), as the plates shift into thier new positions. Major tsunami's will occur at the same time, due to major quakes and the new distribution of the oceans. A blanket of dust, ash, and Carbon Dioxide will cover the earth, effectivly lowering the temperature and quickly freezing the new poles. With all theses new elements thown into the equation, a new thermohaline circulation will develop in our waters. It is documented that 14,000 yrs ago in Barbados the sea level rose by 20 metres. A new pole shift should pull the seas away from the equator. Land masses will just appear, while some coastal areas will be submerged. You have stated that land has risen well above sea level in some areas and not others. This is most likly due to 'upward floating continent-sized plumes of hot rock'(Alessandro Forte-U of Western Ont. & Jerry Mitrovica-U of Toronto). I like to look at this eminant event from every angle. Keep it coming, thankyou. (24.02.2005, 23:51)
J.S.G.: The cataclysmic event you speak of is called the Younger Dryas event. ~13,000 years ago.
- I am not aware of a cause for the Younger Dryas epoch. (28.05.2005, 23:09)
DanielW: Hi,
- I'm interested in learning more about the claims by some people that mammoths survived in North America where they were hunted by Native Americans within the last 2000 years. Any comments, references, and ideas will be greatly appreciated. Thanks, DanielW (01.06.2005, 13:04)
Anon: add in the december quake and the bulge has grown smaller since the earth is now more spherical than before.... would make the shifting of the poles a bit more elusive to calculate. (27.07.2005, 22:53)
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better, visit 2012 Forum
Script by Alex
| [*] The "articulation" of bones
means an arrangement of bones that a person observing them would identify as a
complete skeleton, and from which an experienced observer could identify the species.
For articulated bones to be scarce, means that the bones are mixed and scattered
so badly that a lot of expert attention would be required to identify even the
species.
[14] F. V. Hibben, "Evidence of Early
Man in Alaska", American Antiquity, VIII (1943) p254-259
[15] Immanuel Velikovsky, Earth in
Upheaval (1955), p59 [16] G. M. Price, The New Geology
(1923), p579 [17] Stephen Taber, "Perennially frozen
ground in Alaska: Its Origin and History", Bulletin of the Geographical Society
of America 54 (1943), p. 1489 [18] John Massey Stewart, "Frozen
Mammoths from Siberia Bring the Ice Ages to Vivid Life," Smithsonian, 1977,
p. 67. [19] Ivan T. Sanderson, "Riddle of the
Quick-Frozen Giants", Saturday Evening Post, Jan 16 1960, p82
[20] Penn, Granville, A Comparative Estimate of the
Mineral and Mosaical Geologies, Vol. II, 2nd ed., London, 1825, p. 81. [21] Charles Lyell, Antiquity of Man
(1863), p180 [22] D. S. Allan & J. B. Delair, When
the Earth Nearly Died (1995), p114 [23] Fairholme, George, New and Conclusive Physical
Demonstrations of the Fact and Period of the Mosaic Deluge, n.p., 1837.
[24] D. Gath Whitley, Journal of the
Philosophical Society of Great Britain, XII (1910) p50.
[25] O. Heer, Flora Artica Fossilis:
Die fossile Flora der Polarl¬nder (1868).
[26] Charles H. Hapgood, The Path of
the Pole, (1999), Adventures Unlimited Press, page 67
[27] C. O. Dunbar, Historical Geology
(1949), pp 162, 194 [28] Coral Bleaching, Coral Mortality,
and Global Climate Change, Report presented by Rafe Pomerance, Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State for the Environment and Development - To the U.S. Coral Reef
Task Force, 5 March 1999, Maui, Hawaii, Released by the Bureau of Oceans and International
Environmental and Scientific Affairs, U.S. Department of State, March 5, 1999,
http://www.state.gov/www/global/global_issues/coral_reefs/990305_coralreef_rpt.html
[29] Charles H. Hapgood, The Path of
the Pole, (1999), Adventures Unlimited Press, page 62
[30] Note: Quadrillion = 15 zeroes, ie
19,000,000,000,000,000 tons [31] J.E. Guilday, Differential extinction
during Late-Pleistocene and recent times, in Pleistocene Extinctions: The
Search for a Cause, ed. P. Martin and H.E. Wright (New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1967), pp 75-120 [32] A.L. Wallace, The Geographical Distribution
of Animals, vol.1, (London: MacMillan, 1876) p 150
[33] Saber-toothed Tales, Discover, Apr93, Vol. 14 Issue 4,
p50 |