it many
moons, these planets also had moons, so the field was crowded during the 12th Planet's periodic passage. The
repulsion force prevents large object of a similar size from impact, because the flow of gravity particles acts like a
firehose pointed toward one another, the colliding spray of the particle flow pushing
the return flow of these gravity particles is pulling the two planets toward each other. But when any inequity of size
exists, the repulsion force weakens. The greater the inequity, the greater the weakness. The firehose from the smaller
object is overwhelmed by the return flow of gravity particles returning to the larger object. Thus, a large boulder
would drop to Earth, but your Moon does not.
The Asteroid Belt was created when trash in the 12th Planets tail crashed into moons of some of the large planet in the
Asteroid Belt, putting them in motion so that they became missiles directed at other planets. Eventually with all this
bumping around in a crowded field, the inequity was great enough, the size disproportionate enough, that shattering of
a small planet occurred. Magma sprayed outward in a burst, creating hardened magma in space which then itself
became a missile on the move. Once begun, this process accelerates, creating increasing incidences where a piece of
trash is large enough to shatter a planet. The planets disintegrate
the crust implodes, and the repercussions of this cause more magma plumes, so that the planet eventually does not
have the mass to prevent a collision, by virtue of a repulsion force. Thus these wasted shells eventually collide with
each other, breaking them into what you now term asteroids.
Matter went in every direction and the impacts were fierce. Shattered matter, moving at differing speeds, bumping into
each other and slinging off into different directions, were missiles of death for some time. One disaster followed
another, until at last there were no more hapless planets to be pelted into pieces. The Earth, her waters scattered more
readily than her bulk, wobbled out of orbit at the initial impact. Her wobble took her, eventually, into her present orbit,
closer to the Sun. Here she has formed her present oval shape bit by bit, under the periodic visits of her larger brother,
the 12th Planet, who gives her no peace. She is still attempting to fill in the gaping hole, the scar from that devastating
impact, the gaping expanse between the Americas and the Pacific Rim - the broad Pacific Ocean.
http://www.zetatalk2.com/science/s11.htm[2/5/2012 11:54:22 AM]
ZetaTalk: Near Earth Asteroids
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Indeed, the last passage was
started to shift, it moved to align with the passing Planet X. What happens on such close passage? There is a great deal
of trash that trails behind Planet X, caught in its gravity field. Several moons, and lesser objects such as boulders and
dust. There are likewise asteroids from the Asteroid Belt which attach during a passage, but can be torn away when a
passage close to another gravitational object occurs. These minor objects assume new orbits, in many cases around
assume what is termed a Near Earth Orbit object. How do you suppose they got into those orbits in the first place?
http://www.zetatalk2.com/science/s113.htm[2/5/2012 11:54:23 AM]
ZetaTalk: Continental Drift
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Looking down from space, man can clearly see that the continents once formed a whole. Like the pieces of a puzzle
that can be placed together, South America fits nicely into the curve of the Western African coast, and North America
tucks up against Europe. All was one land mass in the past, so why have the continents drifted so far apart? And what,
in fact, caused the globe to be so lumpy in the first place? Don't planets spinning from a molten state assume a circular
shape? The answer, of course, is that the present Earth did not grow from a molten mass spinning slowly as it cooled,
and thus lost this chance to gain a consistently round shape. When it
precluded the type of intelligence that now inhabits it, as it would have remained a water planet as it was originally,
with barely a point sticking bravely above the water's surface.
The Earth was once in orbit farther from the Sun, and bore as life only cold creatures that lived in the dark waters on
the scant vegetation that grew there. This planet, the pre-Earth, sustained a collision with the 12th Planet's entourage of
many moons, and thus shattered drifted into a new orbit closer to the Sun. The larger piece became the Earth, with its