Article: <5e7ucn$c1d@sjx-ixn8.ix.netcom.com>
From: saquo@ix.netcom.com(Nancy )
Subject: Re: Nancy/Zetas
Date: 16 Feb 1997 21:32:07 GMT
In article <5e5umn$2fq@news.ccit.arizona.edu> Jim Scotti
writes:
>>> I didn't bother to read the rest of this post as
Velikovsky
>>> was debunked very thoroughly by many scientists.
>>> DAS@picknowl.com.au (David Simpson)
>>
>> All those scientific studies he quotes, just nonsense?
>
> The scientific studies Velikovsky quotes aren't nonsense -
just
> his interpretation of them. .. How would you explain the
> Tunguska event in Siberia in 1908? .. The more likely cause
> (and we are converging from all directions on this solution)
> is the impact of a 50 meter diameter stony asteroid.
> jscotti@LPL.Arizona.EDU (Jim Scotti)
(Begin ZetaTalk[TM])
A 50 meter asteroid that HAS YET TO BE UNCOVERED? This was not an
event that happened in the remote past, allowing soil to harden
into rock so that exploration could not proceed. And what would
have cause the trees to flatten outward, for miles, around the
crater? The impact of a large falling object does not cause the
atmosphere to blow outward with force to that extent. Trees might
be jostled and be askew where the ground was jolted, but not
flattened, and in particular, not flatted in an even OUTWARD
pattern. This indicates an explosion. We will ask our emissary,
Nancy, to post OUR explanation of the Tunguska event, an
explanation which makes sense in light of all the evidence, and
incidentally, confirms that pole shifts move the crust.
(End ZetaTalk[TM])
As requested:
(Begin ZetaTalk[TM] on Tunguska Explosion)
A source of endless speculation is the wide area of flattened
trees, spread outward in a circle, the result of an apparent
explosion thatoccurred just after the turn of the century in
Siberia. No witnesses, radioactivity, or meteor remains exist as
pieces toward solving this puzzle. Nuclear power was not yet in
mankind's hands. What occurred? Humans are aware of explosions
that occur naturally and at their hands, but natural explosions
in the atmosphere are so rare as to seem nonexistent. Yet the
potential for this exists, and the force of an explosion is
related to the frequency with which the spark occurs. Gasoline
fumes, without a match or spark, eventually dissipate.
Methane gas occurs naturally, a result of the decomposition of
organic materials. Landfills must vent this or experience
explosions. Some humans know they can light and briefly burn
their farts. Humus or accidentally buried organic material is a
source of methane gas, and if not vented, this attempts to rise,
being light, and will pool if trapped. Siberia was once lush, a
fact the carcasses of mastodons reveal, as their bellies are full
of grass. Flash frozen and covered with volcanic dust, organic
material lies as a potential. Where Siberia may appear to be a
frozen wasteland, the center of the Earth is hot, and
decomposition of trapped matter, proceeding slowly but over a
long time, can accumulate a large, trapped pool of methane gas.
Released due to a shift in the Earth's crust and encountering a
raise in temperature sufficient to act as a spark, this would
explode, with the size of the explosion in proportion to the
volume of violently venting gas.
(End ZetaTalk[TM] on Tunguska Explosion)
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