A reversal in the rotation of Earth is impossible. There are slow movements of the continents (for example Antarctica was near the equator hundreds of millions of years ago)
see evidence; at one time Russia was temperate grassland supporting wooly mammoths etc, then all of a sudden it seemed as if they were all flash frozen. how many intact flash frozen carcasses of mammoth's are there in russia? a ridiculous amount, some with flash frozen grasses in their mouths. Clearly something sudden happened otherwise so many carcasses wouldn't be preserved, and mammoths wouldn't be able to eat grasses from a frozen tundra as it is today so its not like they would hang around were there is no food. therefore pole shifts exist.
Wooly mammoths did not evolve to live on temperate grasslands. You don't grow a fucking thick wooly hide to live at 10 degrees celsius, you grow a fucking thick wooly hide to survive at temperatures between -20 and 5 degrees celsius. The mammoths evolved for a series of ice ages.
In fact, part of the extinction of mammoths is actually being blamed on the climate warming up, rather than cooling down.
Your logic is incredibly stupid and misinformed.
how does that explain so many preserved carcases? the temperatures warming up or being around 5 degrees Celsius would mean no where near as many preserved carcases as there are.
The one that are preserved in ice are very, very far north where they died because it was too cold.
A reversal in the rotation of Earth is impossible. There are slow movements of the continents (for example Antarctica was near the equator hundreds of millions of years ago)
see evidence; at one time Russia was temperate grassland supporting wooly mammoths etc, then all of a sudden it seemed as if they were all flash frozen. how many intact flash frozen carcasses of mammoth's are there in russia? a ridiculous amount, some with flash frozen grasses in their mouths. Clearly something sudden happened otherwise so many carcasses wouldn't be preserved, and mammoths wouldn't be able to eat grasses from a frozen tundra as it is today so its not like they would hang around were there is no food. therefore pole shifts exist.
Wooly mammoths did not evolve to live on temperate grasslands. You don't grow a fucking thick wooly hide to live at 10 degrees celsius, you grow a fucking thick wooly hide to survive at temperatures between -20 and 5 degrees celsius. The mammoths evolved for a series of ice ages.
In fact, part of the extinction of mammoths is actually being blamed on the climate warming up, rather than cooling down.
Your logic is incredibly stupid and misinformed.
how does that explain so many preserved carcases? the temperatures warming up or being around 5 degrees Celsius would mean no where near as many preserved carcases as there are.
why would the Earth changing its rotational direction cause flash freezing in a region of Russia? Your argument doesn't make any sense.
The earth can't change it's rotational direction... that would take a longgggggg time, and there is no force on this planet that I know of that could cause that to happen. Not even a meteor could do that.
On December 21 2012 08:09 FeUerFlieGe wrote: The earth can't change it's rotational direction... that would take a longgggggg time, and there is no force on this planet that I know of that could cause that to happen. Not even a meteor could do that.
if a huge, HUGE asteroid were to hit earth (like 450 - 500km) it might have the force to change the rotation of the earth
...but the process of changing its rotation would still take thousands of years.
Okay some maths: At the equator the Earth is rotating at 1670 km/hr so to reverse direction it has a change in speed of 1670 x 2 = 3340 km/hr. If it took the whole of the 21st to change direction it would require an acceleration of 139 km/hr^2 = 1.07 x 10^-2 m/s^2. The mass of the Earth is 5.97 × 10^24 kg which makes the force required for this 6.39 x 10^22 N which is about the same as the gravitational attraction between the sun and earth. Basically it's not going to happen.
On December 21 2012 08:17 jdseemoreglass wrote: Wow, I just looked up the Psy video... I've never seen comments move that fast in my life. It's like 30 comments a second o.O
On December 21 2012 08:17 jdseemoreglass wrote: Wow, I just looked up the Psy video... I've never seen comments move that fast in my life. It's like 30 comments a second o.O
More like 5.
I think it's having trouble updating or something, it keeps bouncing back to old comments... But I saw an entire page filled with 1 second ago comments.