Pole Shifts, Hapgood, Floods, Impacts & Atlantis -Cosmography101-33.1 with Randall Carlson Dec'08
GeoCosmic REX GeoCosmic REX
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 Published On Oct 30, 2019

Cosmography 101 Class 33 segment 1 with Randall Carlson, from December 2008. RC compares maps of modern and Ice Age sea levels, showing submerged islands and land masses, and discusses the possible effects of continental ice sheets and their transference back into the oceans. Support the work that goes into this channel and further research by Randall and team:   / geocosmicrex   Find ALL the Cosmography101 classes listed in sequence on the playlist. Much more on Atlantis on Randall's new podcast: https://kosmographia.com
Lowered Sea Level Map: https://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/mgg/topo/pi...
Summary notes/topics:
Political viewpoint: “…not left or right but up and out!”
New astronomy software Voyager 4.5 – primarily use for archaeo-astronomy
Maps with coastlines changed, due to sea level fluctuation
Straits of Bosporus – Mediterranean flood into Black Sea
Multiple floods remembered by Egyptians
Catastrophe as uniformity
Plagues and onset of Dark Ages
European sea level change maps comparison
BREAK at 16:28
Ice sheet coverage on northern hemisphere
Pole shifting?
Hapgood: “ Path of the Pole”
Isostatic Adjustment
Velikovsky
Clarify magnetic pole shift, reversal, and geographic shift
Hugh A. Brown, Hapgood migration of crust
Eccentric ice mass off from the pole could cause such shift
Crustal slippage still deemed not likely
Hapgood ’76 revision
Richard Noone 5/5/2000
Improbability of physics due to Newtonian mechanics of gravitational effects across distances
Moon’s effect from perigee to apogee 1000s times more than that of distant planet like Jupiter
BREAK at 28:47
Conclude isostasy to settle the issue of pole shift and how that fits into the whole scenario
Mass displacement, latitudinal disequilibrium
Creates tendency to want to migrate toward equilibrium
Internal and external components that contribute to continental drift, rift zones, and orogeny
“Bombarded Earth”, book from ’66 by French mathematician
Compensatory adjustment from unloading of weight of ice sheet
Vulnerable along Mid-Atlantic Ridge – a hinge-zone
“No evidence” for Atlantis says the geologic community/authorities, so others looked elsewhere
Sam comments regarding Bay of Fundy extreme tides
Manicouagan impact ring lake in Quebec
Nastapoca Arc and Gulf of St. Lawrence possible huge craters that align with Manicouagan

Cosmography101 graphics by Stephen Muncy
Intro music by David Walen Jr.

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