I didn’t knew that the shift of the crust happens over million years. I just learn that with you just now. When I say Mars was a planet like Earth I was thinking the possibility of populate Mars as Caerl Sagan believed as a solution of when Earth. About me always saying that here I have to admit I was wrong [
bigthink.com].
You are right about Antarctica [
oceanwide-expeditions.com]
Cintia Panizza
—————————-
Byrd Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> I can answer a few of the geology/paleontology
> questions
>
> -------------------------------------------------------
> > Are you hate Hancock here? Why is he so in the
> > center of the criticism?
> > About the pole shifting
> >
> >
> [
polarjournal.ch]
>
> This is not the polar shifting that Hancock was
> talking about. He was talking about an instant
> collapse and reversal (and at one time I think he
> supported the Earth flipping over 180 degrees. As
> this journal says, we know that the flip is
> gradual and takes place over a long-ish period of
> time (hundreds, if not thousands, of years.)
>
> > Mars was a planet just like Earth and the
> > weakening of its core caused Mars to be a dead
> > planet with no atmosphere.
>
> Evidence is that it was never very earth-like...
> unless you mean the most primitive iterations of
> Earth, before we developed an oxygen-rich
> atmosphere.
>
> > The electromagnetic
> > fields died and the solar storms were able to
> > destroy everything that was alive. But in the
> > past, I believe that Mars was a planet like
> Earth
> > and displacement of the crust happened to this
> > planet too.
>
> Earth's "crustal displacement" happens on a scale
> of millions of years. Mars, on the other hand,
> doesn't have geologic plates that we can discern.
>
> > Regarding geo- dynamics, Einstein essentially
> > supported Hapgood's very controversial theory
> > called Earth Crust Displacement.
>
> Einstein was great in physics and math. He knew
> nothing about medicine, biology, geology,
> chemistry, archaeology, sports, business,
> linguistics, or a thousand other subjects.
>
> > With respect to
> > geological (planetary) catastrophism.
> > New debates on crust shift in October 2021
> >
> >
> [
earthsky.org]
>
> That's not a crust shift. It's a magnetic pole
> shift. Also, there wasn't a big extinction event,
> at that time (not even a minor one.)
>
> >
> > Forests are being found in Antártica.
> >
> No surprise. Earth's climate was much warmer, and
> the Earth had no ice caps. Antarctica was ice
> free. This is partly due to atmospheric
> conditions (greenhouse gases) and partly due to
> the shape of the continents (changed the flow of
> the Gulf Stream and other big ocean currents.
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Christopher McCandless