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Post by truthseeker on Feb 12, 2018 15:21:17 GMT
Not sure it this belongs in the history board but I did not know where else I should put it: If there was a planet then most of its debris must have left its orbit. Did some of them hit the other planets? Is that why there is no life on mars? What about the other planets? The gas planets would have been to big to be damaged by it and the earth obviously wasn't hit by any of the big wreckages of the planet. Has Venus always been the way it is today? In some pictures it looks like nothing but a bowl of fire and lava: pics-about-space.com/venus-planet-hd-wallpaper?p=1
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Post by truthseeker on Feb 12, 2018 15:33:11 GMT
A very spaced out theoryThere is a theory I have which you will probably find to be to whacky to believe it but I wanted to mention it anyway and hope you will still take me serious afterwards: I seriously wonder if Morrissey could have been an alien from the planet that used to be between Mars and Jupiter. Of course that would make him very old but why should aliens age exactly like us? He wrote the fowllowing song: www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/smiths/backtotheoldhouse.htmlAnd the following song could be a hint that Morrissey is extremely old already: www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/smiths/rubberring.htmlHere you can listen to the song and please consider: Is he really singing "Oh, oh, smother me Mother..."? But even if you think this Morrissey-being-an-alien theory is complete bollocks I would be glad if you still consider the destroyed planet theory and tell me if you find that to be possible.
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Avacyn
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Post by Avacyn on Jun 1, 2018 22:48:09 GMT
I think this is an excellent question to ask. We are finding out more and more about our solar system all the time, and there is an ever increasing complexity being noticed. There has been speculation that we are, in fact, a binary star system, and we have a companion Brown Dwarf star. This would explain certain anomolies in the Outer Solar System area. If I find more on this, I'll work on posting it up on here.
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Post by magpiejack on Aug 20, 2018 15:38:51 GMT
Have you read Cataclysm by DS Allan and JB Delair? They are scientists who looked at two elements, firstly the scientific evidence and secondly the lore and legend (with remarkable common threads) from around the world that points to a cataclysmic event. They feel that this happened about 9500 BC, if I remember correctly I think it was debris from a nearby supernova that hurtled into the solar system and destroyed the planet between Mars and Jupiter. I may be wrong (it's a couple of years since I last read it), but I think they also suggested that this could also have knocked Venus into a reverse orbit.
I see there's a letter in the latest issue of Nexus that mentions the historical memories of the native Australian Gunaikernai people, who say that there was a very rapid sea rise and the sky going dark in the middle of the day about 12000 years ago.
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Post by magpiejack on Aug 20, 2018 15:45:05 GMT
Avacyn, regarding the binary star, I came across the work of Walter Cruttenden a few years ago and he reckons that our binary star is Sirius. He mentions the amateur astronomical observations of a Canadian father and son over many years, who noticed that Sirius doesn't precess in the sky - it stays in the same place in the sky, unlike the precessional motion of all the other stars. He wrote The Lost Star of Myth and Time, also an interesting read. If two amateur astronomers have noticed this, surely academia has too, so why is it being kept quiet?
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UnseenI
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Post by UnseenI on Aug 20, 2018 15:48:45 GMT
Maybe this will get our leader Avacyn to come back! I haven't looked into this topic at all, but I really like this approach: "They are scientists who looked at two elements, firstly the scientific evidence and secondly the lore and legend (with remarkable common threads)"
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Avacyn
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Post by Avacyn on Aug 22, 2018 19:21:20 GMT
Avacyn, regarding the binary star, I came across the work of Walter Cruttenden a few years ago and he reckons that our binary star is Sirius. He mentions the amateur astronomical observations of a Canadian father and son over many years, who noticed that Sirius doesn't precess in the sky - it stays in the same place in the sky, unlike the precessional motion of all the other stars. He wrote The Lost Star of Myth and Time, also an interesting read. If two amateur astronomers have noticed this, surely academia has too, so why is it being kept quiet? I'm pretty tired, so am not properly processing the information. But... Sirius is already a binary system. This is something discovered in the twentieth century. But what is interesting is that the orbit matches that told by the Dogon tribe. They also said there was another star orbiting Sirius. Another thing to consider is that Sirius is 8.7 Light Years away. According to scientists. Just thought I would throw this out.
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Post by magpiejack on Sept 10, 2018 19:35:21 GMT
Thanks for your reply Avacyn, sorry for not replying earlier - I've recently changed jobs so things have been pretty hectic. I'm pretty tired right now too, but have just had a quick flick through Cruttenden's book for anything that could be relevant to the points you made. He mentions the Dogon lore too as well as other ancient lore; one book I have called The Holy Science (published in the early 20th century I think) states that the ancients said that the sun had a twin star.
I really need to give it a thorough read again, but other stuff is in the way right now! Sirius is a long way away that's true, but apparently Sirius B is an incredibly dense star and Cruttenden says, "Spinning rapidly on its axis, it is likely generating a tremendous force and magnetic field". It is a binary system, but I wonder if its combined mass and force could bind another star?
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Avacyn
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Post by Avacyn on Sept 18, 2018 22:05:54 GMT
Thanks for your reply Avacyn, sorry for not replying earlier - I've recently changed jobs so things have been pretty hectic. I'm pretty tired right now too, but have just had a quick flick through Cruttenden's book for anything that could be relevant to the points you made. He mentions the Dogon lore too as well as other ancient lore; one book I have called The Holy Science (published in the early 20th century I think) states that the ancients said that the sun had a twin star. I really need to give it a thorough read again, but other stuff is in the way right now! Sirius is a long way away that's true, but apparently Sirius B is an incredibly dense star and Cruttenden says, "Spinning rapidly on its axis, it is likely generating a tremendous force and magnetic field". It is a binary system, but I wonder if its combined mass and force could bind another star? Well, it won't be binding the sun to it! It's too far away, at 8.7 Light Years Away, if I recall correctly.
As for our solar system being a binary star system, we need to consider the outer solar system. Something has made Pluto's orbit strange, and Uranus is rotating wrongly, as if something bowled it over. Lots of things like that, make me seriously wonder what is out there, causing an influence. Of course, if we were a binary star system, wouldn't we see it moving about in the sky? Unless it's something like a brown dwarf...
Maybe it's an incrfedably dense star that is affecting our system? And maybe it's what caused the destruction of planets, and the creation of the asteroid belt?
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