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Tag Archives for " 2012 end of the world "

2012 Pole Shift Caused by Ice Melt?

I recently saw the Public Broadcasting Station‘s shocking but beautiful documentary, Extreme Ice. Dazzling photographs of illustrate the possibly irreversible melting of crucial glaciers at the earth’s poles. Could this meltdown of the ice lead to a pole shift as predicted by Edgar Cayce? I vaguely remember reading in the foreword of one of Immanuel Velikovsky‘s books something about a shift in the ice at the poles possibly causing the earth’s crust to shift over our planet’s core like the rind over the inside of an orange. Could this be the 2012 cataclysm?

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2012 Warning Doesn’t Make Sense

Here’s a quote that doesn’t make sense. It says that our solar system will be below the Milky Way Galaxy. That’s impossible since the Solar System – our sun, earth, moon, and the planets – are part of the Milky Way Galaxy. We are IN the Milky Way Galaxy. We cannot be below it. We are tiny. All the stars you see at night surrounding us are also in the Milky Way Galaxy, which is huge. For us to be below the Milky Way, we would have to be out in space without stars surrounding us.

The Milky Way Galaxy is our home galaxy. To say that the Solar System would be below and out of the Milky Way Galaxy is as absurd as saying that a waterlily would not be in a pond.

Here’s the quote from 2012 Warning:

The sun, earth, and milky way will align at the galactic equator, on December 21, 2012, the winter solstice, the shortest day of the year, and the end of the Mayan calendar. This only happens every 25,800 years! For the first time in recorded history, our entire solar system will move BELOW the milky way galaxy. These combined cosmic events, will be the end of the world as we know it.

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Winter Star Party a Great Success!

Sad to say, the Winter Star Party is over. However, we had great viewing on our last night, in spite of clear sky reports to the contrary. Because of this year’s cold weather in the Florida Keys, many amateur astronomers had left, giving those of us remaining, the pick of the places to set up our telescopes. Actually, because it was so windy, the most sheltered spots were the best. And, to tell you the truth, many of us spent much of the night visiting with each other knowing that we wouldn’t see each other until next year. I feel happy to be part of this group. And, since I had the digital photos of the Galactic Center that I had came to take, it was easy to relax and reminisce about the week. I will be using the photos in my movie investigating the 2012 phenomenon.

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The Adventure Begins!

John and I are off on another adventure. This time, we are going to northern British Columbia in pursuit of the Nisga’a Lava Beds. Earlier on this trip, we visited Mount Rainier and Mount St. Helens in Washington State. I want to have images of volcanic mountains in the Pacific Ring of Fire for my 2012 movie.

Most people know about Rainier and St. Helens.  But, do you know that Canada had a major volcanic eruption only 300 years ago? We have been to the Nisga’g Lava Beds before but, at that time, I did not bring my video camera. This time, I want to take footage of the lava beds that look like a river made out of huge chunks of charcoal covered in lichens. In the 300 years since the volcanic eruption that created these lava beds, there has hardly been any regrowth over the lava unlike the Mount St. Helens area, which erupted only about 30 years ago in 1980. The Nisga’a lava beds look as strange as a moonscape.

We have a long wait until our Hawk Air flight to Terrace BC.  My laptop is plugged into an electrical outlet beside my chair. The red “battery charging” light on my camcorder is blinking because there is a second electrical outlet beside my chair where I have plugged in the camera. I used up two batteries taking exciting dynamic shots of seaplanes landing and taking off in Victoria. Now, I need to make sure that my camera will be ready to take footage of the volcanic mountains ,which are part of the Canadian Cascades, which we will be flying over on our way to Terrace. 

John is sitting  next to me in the small aircraft hanger adjacent to Vancouver International Airport. He is wearing a straw cowboy hat we got in Yucatan. His breathing is becoming audible and deep. His hands are clasped over his abdomen and his eyes are closed. His head is falling forward. Will he begin to snore?

Carol Chapman —

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