Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Comet Paper

Planet-X, Comets and Earth Changes by J.M. McCanney

The Hazard to Civilization from Fireballs and Comets (download PDF)
Tipping Point: As sea levels climb higher so a response from the world's volcanoes becomes ever more likely, and perhaps not just from volcanoes. Loading of the continental margins could activate faults, triggering increased numbers of earthquakes, which in turn could spawn giant submarine landslides. 

On this God-forsaken island Bill Gates is investing tens of his millions along with the Rockefeller Foundation, Monsanto Corporation, Syngenta Foundation and the Government of Norway, among others, in what is called the 'doomsday seed bank.' Officially the project is named the Svalbard Global Seed Vault on the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen, part of the Svalbard island group. 


The present report, then, is concerned with those other celestial bodies recorded by mankind since the dawn of civilization which either miss or impinge upon the Earth and which have also been despised. Now known respectively as comets (>1 kilometre in size) and meteoroids (<10>

Comet Arend-Roland's sunward spike - a high energy electron beam connecting the discharging comet and the Sun.
Immanuel Velikovsky, demonized in his time, was more right than wrong, according to James McCanney.
To sum up, here's a list of possible effects that can occur months and years before the actual close passage of a Planet-X-type object, summarized from McCanney's supplement pamphlet Surviving Planet X Passage (pp. 20 - 25):
  • -violent storms with excessive lightning, wind and water (drawn in from space in the manner comets do) 
  • -degradation of complete elimination of infrastructures and facilities 
  • -groups of cyclones, destroying housing 
  • -torrential rains and mudslides, causing mass flooding 
  • -erratic weather, like snow in the tropics 
  • -influx of chemicals such as water, ammonia, and hydrocarbons 
  • -contaminated water supplies 
  • -visible electric discharges between planets and moons 
  • -colorful auroras, trumpet- and whistle-like sounds caused by discharging 
  • -frequent magnetic reversals allowing radioactive particles to enter our atmosphere, causing gene mutations and new species 
  • -blotting out of the Sun leading to mini-Ice Age 
  • -meteor stream impacts 
  • -"plagues" as electric currents force insects and vermin out of the ground 
  • -"pillar of fire" as Earth forms an electrical connection with Planet X, scorching the Earth and producing deafening noise 
  • -if the object is larger than Earth, the loss of atmosphere and oceans; if smaller, massive pollution events 
  • -physical pole-shift, displacing continents and causing the flash-freezing of animals (e.g., the Wooly Mammoths) and causing earthquakes and the eruption of old and new volcanoes 
  • -the above resulting in an altered orbit, rotation, and tilt of the Earth, requiring a re-calibrating of our calendar (for which McCanney gives practical instruction in the pamphlet)That's the picture painted by early humanity. Whether it's some or all, that's what is coming. 
So why is NASA looking for asteroids? 

Maybe because they're the only thing that they can observe in the inner solar system with trajectories intersecting earth. And at the same time they are the only thing they can make plans to divert years in advance. They can't bother with comets, because they come from the outer solar system without warning. In fact, there is no NASA program, publicly at least, that tries to detect comets. Almost all comets discovered in recent history were found by amateurs with backyard telescopes. One exception is comet Shoemaker-Levy, formally designated D/1993 F2, discovered by three professional astronomers, Eugene and Carolyn Shoemaker and David Levy, the ninth short-periodic comet they had spotted. It was first detected on a photograph taken on the night of March 24, 1993 with the 0.4-meter Schmidt telescope on Palomar Mountain in California. The comet collided with Jupiter in July 1994. 

Has Planet X been sighted? 3,600 year cycle
Asteroid 2001 KX76 is even larger than Pluto's moon Charon (diameter 1150 km)

Dynamics of a Small Comet - A closer look at the dynamics of a small comet has been presented, based on the solar capacitor discharge model of comet behavior and new insights gained from the Giacobini-Zinner fly-by of 1985.
This paper shows that comets are not ice balls melted by solar radiation, but are asteroidal bodies which become electrically charged within the Sun's sphere of influence and are attracting the dust and ions observed in the comet tail. 

For instance, back in July of 2010 a 6.2 magnitude earthquake shook Chile just hours after a solar eclipse touched the region. Another 7.2 magnitude earthquake shook Japan within 24 hours of the recent (and rare) lunar eclipse, on December 22nd of last year. Then recently, to coincide with our recent New Moon and blast from the sun, there was an earthquake detected along on the border of India and Myanmar. 
Just to note, Mount Kirishima, as pictured above, experienced a series of three eruptions on February 3rd which coincides with our major storms mentioned in the introduction. The recent events I speak of include the major blizzard that swept across the Midwestern and Eastern US as well as the punishment Cyclone Yasi inflicted on eastern Australia earlier last week. (2/7/2011)



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