Normally papers like Jaye's Worldwide Flood "paper" in MAA, even if they somehow
make it past peer-review, simply disappear into the literature by being ignored by
serious scientists because of their numerous glaring defects. However, Jaye's Worldwide
Flood paper MAA is actually cited by presumably serious paper in a serious peer-
reviewed journal, Journal of Coastal Research. The paper is:
Liritzis, I., Westra, A. and Miao, C., 2019. Disaster Geoarchaeology and Natural
Cataclysms in World Cultural Evolution: An Overview. Journal of Coastal Research,
35(6), pp.1307-1330.
[
bioone.org]
In another paper, Jaye's Worldwide Flood "paper" is cited as having shown "...the
remnants of the Young Dry-as impacting object found in the Southern Ocean,
southeast of South Africa, north of Antarctica, and south of Madagascar..."
this paper is:
Oguz-Kirca, E.D. and Liritzis, I., 2019, Reemergence of Atlantis: The Shifting
Paradigm and Creation of Neo-Spatial Models. Scientific Culture Vol. 5, No. 3,
(2019), pp. 69-88
[
sci-cult.com]
Given that the comment period has expired for MAA, maybe a suitable
comment on the reliability of Jaye's "paper" might be prepared for submittal
to "Scientific Culture."
Both Jaye's original "paper" and the two that cite it likely provide examples
of researching topics that are far outside a person's area of expertise.
Yours,
Paul H.
"The past is never dead. It's not even past."
William Faulkner, Act 1, Scene III, Requiem for a Nun (1951)
Edited 5 time(s). Last edit at 11/24/2019 05:26PM by Paul H..