continents or
close to the ocean surface may rise and fall, depending on the plate action around the site and elsewhere around the
globe. If plate action thrusts formerly submerged land out from under the sea, then the settling oceans have less area to
settle into and consequently beaches worldwide may rise. Likewise, a sudden yaw in a mid-ocean rift may cause
beaches worldwide to drop, but inevitably the yaw is matched by a crunch elsewhere, where land will subduct.
After a pole shift the former poles invariably melt and soften while the new poles take on layer after layer of ice and
snow. This pace is not matched, as polar cap building only stabilizes at a point where evaporation and melting at
glacial edges equals the arrival of newly fallen snow after some centuries. In the meantime the Waters Rise worldwide,
several hundred feet, and then recede again. This pace is gradual, so that coastal settlements have plenty of time to
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ZetaTalk: New Geography
relocate, an exercise they find they must do repeatedly.
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ZetaTalk: Climate Changes
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The pole shift, of course, radically affects the climate of every place on Earth. How could it not? The equator has
changed, and formerly temperate and even polar areas now find themselves under the hot, continuous equatorial sun.
Inhabitants of these areas may find themselves subject to severe sunburn, for the first time in their lives, and, not
understanding the phenomena, not know what to do. Other inhabitants, formerly in the equator, will quickly freeze to
death. The temperature plunges, unremittingly, and they are ill prepared. This is, all told, a relatively benign death, as
the hypothermic body becomes dreamy and seemingly falls asleep. Few areas will find the climate remaining the same,
by coincidence having the same relative latitude as before.
Over time the plants and animals change, accommodating the climatic change. Plants, in particular, are hard hit, as
they are sensitive to the temperature, humidity, and exposure to sun and wind. The die off is massive, but certain other
opportunists survive. Over time, there is a creep that occurs, such that from places where the climate has remained the
same plants grow outward toward where they find conditions hospitable. The opportunists who took over, preempting
all the strugglers, find they are being pushed, steadily, to assume their former status. Animals, being mobile, are less
hard hit, and either adjust their day and night to the new conditions or travel. After a time, a few centuries, the Earth
looks much as it did before, only this time with new poles, a new equator, and newly established temperate zones.
All of this activity is modulated at first by the gloom cause by Volcanic Dust. During the hour of the shift, all
volcanoes active now or dormant now will explode. Likewise, during this hour, hurricane force winds will whip over
the oceans. Due to this interaction, the gloom and humidity are present almost immediately after the shift.
Disbursement, so that this is evenly spread, occurs over the next few days, within a week, but the effect is virtually
immediate on vegetation requiring sunlight and a dry bed. Strong sunlight occurs only occasionally, in certain
locations. In the main there is dusk, ever present dusk. Where there is vegetation die back, this is caused in fact more
by the lack of sunshine than by any climatic changes. Animal life is impacted by the lack of food, too, more than
climatic changes. However, after a couple decades, the skies clear, and then the climatic changes are the stronger
determinant.
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ZetaTalk: New Climate
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Overall, the Earth's climate remains much as it is today, throughout and after the cataclysms. Initially, just after the
pole shift, the local climate at any given point on the Earth will be a result of several factors.
Previous climate, as for instance on a former polar ice cap, will have either a warming or cooling influence. This
will only be extreme where ice packs linger or the ground is deeply frozen. Elsewhere warming or cooling to
temperatures appropriate to the new longitude occur within days.
Placement on the day or night side of the Earth, when rotation stops for days preceding the pole shift, and slowly
begins again after the 12th Planet passes. Again, this effect dissipates within days.
Volcanic activity and the roiling of the Earth's core, which continue for some decades after a pole shift, just as
they do during the decade preceding a pole shift. The 12th Planet lingers nearby, during its turnaround, and
makes a second pass a few years later. During this period the core of the Earth is not settled. Overall, this