opposition to the 12th Planet, the move is to come into
Distance makes some difference, but more influential is whether the two planets are lined up pole to pole or side to side
on the approach. In a pole to pole confrontation the 12th Planet's North Pole essentially grips the Earth's South Pole
and drags it with it as it passes, pushing away the North Pole. In a side to side confrontation, the Earth is only nudged
to line up with her brother, just as small magnetic particles in ore attempt to align with each other. The position of the
Earth or the 12th Planet during any passage is strictly by chance, governed by the various influences that affect the
arrival of the 12th Planet, which can meet with any number of delaying influences on its journey. Thus, there is no
regularity to dramatic pole shifts, where the Earth is essentially turned upside down.
Dramatic reversals happen rarely, as the 12th Planet must virtually come between the Earth and the Sun to have this
much influence. This happens in only 15% of the pole shifts, as where this vulnerable position constitutes perhaps
30% of the possible arc, the range of possibility is such that the Earth may be on the opposite side of the Sun just as
often as not, cutting these odds in half. When the Sun stands between the Earth and the 12th Planet there is, in essence,
no pole shift but simple tension and compression in the crust, expressed as increased earthquakes and volcanism. This
safety zone constitutes another 40% of the possible arc. The remaining 45% of the arc experiences alignment shifts,
rather than opposition shifts. Thus, the wandering Poles reflect 15% massive opposition movement, where the North
Pole is tipped backwards away from the 12th Planet, balanced by 45% minor alignment movement, where the North
Pole is tipped forward slightly to line up with the 12th Planet's magnetic alignment.
http://www.zetatalk2.com/science/s72.htm[2/5/2012 11:54:21 AM]
ZetaTalk: Wandering Poles
This finds the records of where the North and South Poles have been, in the main, essentially close to their position at
present. Mankind is missing at least half the record, those former poles which are now under water, but the pattern
would not look much different with these missing pieces added. Human written and verbal history will not serve man
well in preparation for the forthcoming pole shift, as a shift as devastating as this one will be has not occurred even
within the past 50,000 years. Even The Flood was merely the result of two minor shifts, back to back - one to displace
the South Pole so that partial melting and softening started, and the second to break and drop the suspended ice into
the ocean.
http://www.zetatalk2.com/science/s72.htm[2/5/2012 11:54:21 AM]
ZetaTalk: Chance of Collision
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In the past, the 12th Planet's orbit was farther out in your Solar System, but over the eons your Sun has lost mass, and
the orbit now comes between the Earth and the Sun. What is the risk of collision between the comet and the other
planets in the Solar System? Where the Earth and the comet were in each other's path in the past, there was more than
the element of chance involved. You, on your highways, have hurtling missiles on a collision course with each other
by the millions, yet you have very few collisions. There is an additional factor in place in planetary collisions, as they
are no more without drivers than your hurtling automobiles. All planetary bodies have attraction/repulsion factors at
play, and when they come close to each other they in fact push each other away. This in almost all cases suffices to
prevent collision, although for any inhabitants it is a shaky experience.
Where actual collisions occur there is a difference in body size, with the smaller object traveling at great speed. The
speed overcomes the repulsion, and the smaller object also becomes caught in the gravitational pull of the larger
object. Such is the case, for instance, when meteors fall to Earth.
There are remnants of planets between tiny Mars and the giant Jupiter, which once held the potential for life such as
your Earth now holds. These water planets met their death during the Asteroid Belt confrontations, where missiles
went every which way during the passing comet's journey. Should your Solar System not have been so disturbed, you
would not be counting the comet as the 12th Planet (or actual 10th orbiting Planet) but as the 24th Planet. Most of the
planets that were destroyed were tiny, like Mars or less, and quite vulnerable to destruction by a larger traveling body.
They became caught in the gravitational web of the traveling monster, drawn in to become moons, or what we call
travelers, and it was one such that struck the Earth early in her life, and gave her the wound that is now the deep
Pacific Ocean.
http://www.zetatalk2.com/science/s30.htm[2/5/2012 11:54:21 AM]
ZetaTalk: Rotation/Orbit
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