...I read somewhere that the mountains, coastlines and the great Rift geological fault in
Africa could all be explained by a massive twisting moment exerted upon the Earth by some external force...
Which brings up the question of what caused the Himalayas. If that was a fly-by too,
then the Earth's axis presumably shifted, because we would not expect a planet to approach
from the direction of the north pole, or the south pole. The whole mechanism is none too
clear. It appears that the region of the Himalayas was where the electrical currents touched
down, thus impeding this region from rotating with the rest of the Earth. And so India
travelled into the Himalayas, or else travelled alongside the mountains.
It does look like the African Rift was formed when the Andes were also formed. And have
you seen on Google Earth the sideways marks in the Atlantic Ocean, which suggest that
this area was stretched. Maybe a region in the Pacific was stretched when the Himalayas
were formed ? Presumably some ares went down when the mountains formed. And there
is evidence of buildings in the ocean around the Philipines - Japan - Indonesia.
Similarly absurd is the explanation of the large brontosaur type animals
living in water to support their grotesque weight. Rob
If the dinosaurs came from Mars, then they probably came with water and this
could have helped them survive for a while, by living in the numerous lagoons.
And the smaller one's might have had enough time to adapt to the new gravity
and move out onto the land. And, indeed, electrical conditions could have caused
DNA changes to assist this process.
Many mysteries.
Mo
Mars-Earth interaction
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