The Antarctic plate is now free on all sides! The overlapping and compressing plates on the Pacific side represent
pressure and
moves in that direction. Freed of tight borders, it is free to float or sink in the sea of lava that all plates ride upon, and
as a land plate, being lighter than those that have sunk under the deep seas, it floats - new land! There are contours on
plates, below water, just as there are contours above water. The portion of the Antarctic plate that emerges above the
waves is higher than the rest of the Antarctic plate . Thus, the new land and existing Antarctica are not joined.
http://www.zetatalk2.com/poleshft/p100.htm[2/5/2012 9:55:37 AM]
ZetaTalk: Other Planets
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The 12th Planet, barreling though the Solar System, affects more than just the Earth, as might be imagined. How could
it not affect the other planets, particularly those close to the Sun. Where the Earth experiences a pole shift each time,
being composed of materials that magnetically align with the giant comet, other planets have wholly different
reactions. Venus, for instance, is relatively unaffected, outside of a slight change in orbit toward the path of the comet.
Mars also has a pole shift, but this is slight as this planet has cooled and has less fluidity in its core than the Earth. The
planets in the outer orbits, depending on their weight, pull slightly inward during the comet's passage, but find their
normal route later, the influence of other factors determining their normal orbit weighing in again. And how does the
Sun itself react? Imperturbable, not even a flare, as its activity is influenced from within, not without.
http://www.zetatalk2.com/poleshft/p35.htm[2/5/2012 9:55:37 AM]
ZetaTalk: Rotation Returns
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After the 12th Planet passes, the Earth's rotation begins again due to the factors that guide rotation of the planets in
your solar system. Many humans assume rotation to be simply leftover motion resulting from some past activity such
as the big bang, but rotation is guided by gravitational and electromagnetic influences on the liquid cores of planets
and moons. Parts of the core move away from or toward these influences, dragging the crust with it, and as the turning
motion brings those parts of the core back to where they don't want to be, motion is re-instituted and continued. For
the Earth, frozen in place at the moment of passage, rotation begins again within a day after the 12th Planet moves
from its influential place between the Earth and the Sun. Rotation restarts, at first slowly but then picking up speed
until a day on planet Earth is much as it used to be. Just as rotation
day, much to the relief of the frantic survivors who fear the long day or night they have been experiencing will never
end.
http://www.zetatalk2.com/poleshft/p69.htm[2/5/2012 9:55:38 AM]
ZetaTalk: New Geography
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After the pole shift the Earth begins rotating again, with its new poles in the same relative position to the Solar System
as today. In other words, whatever part of the Earth is North, magnetically, after the shift, will become the new North
Pole. The pole shift, with consequent realignment of the poles, will place the New Equator over formerly frozen lands.
Greenland, Canada, Alaska, Siberia, and Europe will be affected by the new equator. This will not mean that these
areas will be lush, right away. The temperate zones, not all that lush to begin with, will find themselves after the
cataclysms in a warm state, but with little vegetation. Past cataclysms have regularly rearranged the Earth's geography
and climate zones, as the Earth attests. The continents, once one large land mass, were torn apart, temperate or tropical
areas suddenly freezing up and covering over with ice and snow that never melts, and frozen wastelands gradually
melting and warming to sustain life once again. Mountains in mountain building areas were pushed higher and
subducting plates were suddenly slid under the overplate.
While the land rearranges the oceans slosh about but eventually settle into the lower areas. Coastal spots that had
formerly been above the water line may now be under the waves, and likewise plates that had been submerged may
now be dry land. How much land pokes above the waves depends on how deep and wide the ocean rifts are, but
historically the land mass in total has remained the same. Continents do not disappear, but plates abutting