|
Re: nasa.gov/scientific-consensus
Posted:
Jun 6, 2014 12:36 AM
|
|
Am 05.06.2014 19:47, schrieb The Starmaker:
>>>> See any graph of historical sea levels. >>>> >>> >>> Most scientist do not accept the idea of 'Growing Earth'. So the >>> constant size of Earth is a fixed dogma, that must not be questioned. >>> >>> From this the conclusion is drawn, that where is land now there always >>> was land. Hence A region without ice-cover must have lost that by ice >>> sliding down or melting away. >>> >>> To find out, if other heights of oceans are possible, you may look for >>> apparently marine remains on land. >>> >>> Possible remains are fossils, coast-lines in mountains or sand in deserts. >>> >>> For example, the Alps are covered with shells and other sediments. The >>> entire Sahara is full of sand. Atolls are remains of corals and these >>> marine animals. >>> >>> Coastlines are created by rushing in waves, that create specific >>> patterns and these can be found in mountains. >>> http://www.omanarchive.com/content/fotoarchiv.php?Detail=w7&lang=D >>> >>> These and many other hints indicate, that falling sea-levels is an >>> ongoing and large-scale phenomenon. But scientist fail to see this, >>> because it is apparently a forbidden subject and referring to 'Growing >>> Earth' could eventually end an otherwise promising career. >>> >>> But there is no such thing as 'approved science', since things are >>> either right or wrong and closing the eyes about unwanted facts can >>> spoil the entire afford of research. >>> >>> >>> TH >> >> Doesn't that belong in a sci-fi group? > > > The Sahara desert belongs in the sci-fi group?? >
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aral_Sea
This is a formerly huge lake in Kazakhstan. Now imagine, this had happened earlier in other places and is actually a natural phenomenon, (even if humans have worsened it).
But imagine people lived at the coast of such a lake, who lived well. Now the water disappears and only a HUGE salt-plane remains.
It takes a lot of time, possibly generations. But it is fast enough, that people recall a better life earlier.
What will they do?
Possibly beg for water! But how to communicate?
The declining sea is actually a good surface to draw kind of 'land art'. So people paint: please send water!!!
But, as a matter of fact, the water did not come. But the messages remain and turn into stone:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazca_Lines
TH
|
|