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Old 07-04-2005   #1 (permalink)
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Maybe you'll be interested

Gentlemen and ladies

I'm new to this site and intrigued, I have some rather bombastic animations of tectonic movement that might just blow yoour minds, or not, but I gaurantee you'll be entertained.

http://www.nealadams.com/nmu.html

-Neal Adams
Old 07-04-2005   #2 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NAdams
Gentlemen and ladies

I'm new to this site and intrigued, I have some rather bombastic animations of tectonic movement that might just blow yoour minds, or not, but I gaurantee you'll be entertained.

http://www.nealadams.com/nmu.html

-Neal Adams
that is seriously very interesting. this is similar to how we thought the earth was flat and it turned out to be round. now we're realizing the earth may be growing in size. i think it's totally possible. stars are known to change in size, why not planets too.


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Old 07-04-2005   #3 (permalink)
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Re: Maybe you'll be interested

I have been told that only a few Geologists in Australia and a couple of flakes buy this concept, but I have found professors, geologists, a paleontologist or two who partially or wholly agree with this concept. The demos at http://www.nealadams.com/nmu.html are the very best I can produce at my facility but some folks are stunned by the simplicity and the obvious fact that the continents fit perfectly. Not sorta, but perfectly. No cheating in anyway, as disciplined as I could do it. More over, I followed the undersea maps that act like a road map to the continent’s original positions.

The implications of this are a bit epic if it is true.

Suns, small note, our Sun is throwing off a hundred million tons of ions, electrons, and hydrogen atoms per second into our solar system, math that back five billion years. I think there is a new science out there, but that’s just me.

How do other folks feel about this, I keep wondering?

-Neal Adams
Old 07-04-2005   #4 (permalink)
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Lightbulb Re: Maybe you'll be interested

___Interesting stuff indeed. Do you propose Earth has grown with the addition of space debris, or that the planet is hollow?


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Old 07-04-2005   #5 (permalink)
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Re: Maybe you'll be interested

Quote:
Originally Posted by NAdams
I have been told that only a few Geologists in Australia and a couple of flakes buy this concept, but I have found professors, geologists, a paleontologist or two who partially or wholly agree with this concept. The demos at http://www.nealadams.com/nmu.html are the very best I can produce at my facility but some folks are stunned by the simplicity and the obvious fact that the continents fit perfectly. Not sorta, but perfectly. No cheating in anyway, as disciplined as I could do it. More over, I followed the undersea maps that act like a road map to the continent’s original positions.

The implications of this are a bit epic if it is true.

Suns, small note, our Sun is throwing off a hundred million tons of ions, electrons, and hydrogen atoms per second into our solar system, math that back five billion years. I think there is a new science out there, but that’s just me.

How do other folks feel about this, I keep wondering?

-Neal Adams

It could easily be that the seperation in the areas you observe are balanced by a coming together elsewhere. That would fit well with plate tectonics in general.
-Will
Old 07-04-2005   #6 (permalink)
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Re: Maybe you'll be interested

Quote:
Originally Posted by Turtle
___Interesting stuff indeed. Do you propose Earth has grown with the addition of space debris, or that the planet is hollow?
Five to seven billion years ago, Earth may have begun with space debris (debris? Big area, not now,) but in time growth became crystalline (all silicate is crystalline) pushing out like a geode but in time, matter must have been created inside the planet as it is apparently on the Sun and the Earth , like all other planets and reasonable sized moons (Gaynemede for example) produced matter on the inside which pushes outward, because silicates are straight sided and can’t push in, so must push outward again like a geode.

Of course, this is physics, not geology, but of course, a new view of the Universe cannot depend on one discipline, say geology. It must include all sciences.

The question we must ask is did all the matter in the Universe always exist, same amount then, now, and in the future, or was there none, then some was made, then more and more until we have the Universe we have now.

If your answer is the second, there is one more question to consider, who turned off the off switch?

http://www.nealadams.com/nmu.html for demos

-Neal Adams

Last edited by NAdams; 07-04-2005 at 05:34 PM..
Old 07-04-2005   #7 (permalink)
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Question Re: Maybe you'll be interested

Quote:
Originally Posted by Turtle
___Interesting stuff indeed. Do you propose Earth has grown with the addition of space debris, or that the planet is hollow?
why can't it just be that whatever is going on in the earth's core changes the size of the entire planet? maybe what's going on in the core impacts the earth's gravity and is different now than millions of years ago.

our own sun is going to get bigger (red giant) before it gets smaller.

to get an idea of what i'm saying, say the earth's core has reactions like the sun. now say these reactions go into a red giant phase so the core increases in size and so the outer layers and surface have to expand too.


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"...humans have learned that what they can touch, smell, see, and hear is less than one millionth of reality." - Buckminster Fuller

Last edited by Chaos; 07-04-2005 at 06:03 PM..
Old 07-04-2005   #8 (permalink)
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Re: Maybe you'll be interested

Quote:
Originally Posted by Erasmus00
It could easily be that the seperation in the areas you observe are balanced by a coming together elsewhere. That would fit well with plate tectonics in general.
-Will
Well, no Will. Continents are part of the oceanic plates like a tree stump is buried in the land, can’t move.

You’re looking for subduction for your answer. Subduction is a theory existing for forty years that has no verifiable proof of being correct. Even Geologists have buried this theory by discovering most of the asthenosphere is solid and only .04 percent is molten. It’s hard to subduct into a solid and even if it was molten, Archimedes would have something to say about displacing something heavy with something lighter.

Beyond all that, Will, perhaps we can join the ancient Greeks and say we have the most unique planet in the universe, one half spreads it’s plates while the other half brings them together.

-Neal
Old 07-04-2005   #9 (permalink)
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Re: Maybe you'll be interested

If not subduction, what drives the volcanic activity along plate boundaries? If not orogeny, the result of subduction, what creates the mountain ranges along plate boundaries?


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Old 07-04-2005   #10 (permalink)
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Thumbs up Re: Maybe you'll be interested

NAdams,

i don't know exactly what's causing things to expand, but i definitely think you're on to something. i can't believe i haven't heard of this until today.

btw, your videos and commentary are very good, imo. i watched all 3.


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"...humans have learned that what they can touch, smell, see, and hear is less than one millionth of reality." - Buckminster Fuller
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