Thunderbolts Forum ................... Re: Submerged ancient caves, pyramids, sites, cities, etc. Post by David Talbott » Tue Apr 08, 2008 1:26 pm Again, good job Michael. I can remember, around the the mid-eighties, a somewhat poignant conversation with Ev Cochrane, who had read the Saturn Myth in 1980 and subsequently emerged as a superb researcher on the subject. He asked me what I thought of the famous cave art of Europe. I said, simply, nostalgia. The artists were, in their protected environment, celebrating the only natural world they had come to know. Human were not yet glancing backwards at the elaborate sequence of cosmic events from which the myths arose. They simply yearned to recover the pastoral environment that existed before everything changed. As I've learned more about the plasma discharge phenomena involved, it's become all the more obvious that nostalgia is the overriding factor. In the more energetic phases of the discharge activity, those with an open view to the configuration would not survive. Based primarily on the nature of their art, I'd suggest that the cave-bound artists were driven to their habitat by events preceding the complex evolution of the celestial configuration under discussion. Later, when faced with the urgency of the situation and a need to comprehend it in some way (if for no other reason than to anticipate coming events), humans everywhere carved elaborate rock art of the intensely energetic formations. It is apparent that the charged bodies moved toward the south (my suggestion here, with no desire to burden others with it). One of Anthony Peratt's most extraordinary contributions has been his finding that the rock artists consistently used natural shields to the south to protect themselves from the deadly synchrotron radiation. I trust y'all know what happens when you stand out in the open and look at the face of the gorgon or other mythic monster representing an intense discharge phase. A Sumerian phrase for this form in the sky was "the terrifying splendor [glory, power] in the center of An [primeval unity]." But all things considered, it's clear that the situation got sporadically worse with the full fragmentation of the configuration and, eventually, the violent wars of the gods and the displacement of the cosmic theater to the south. David Talbott David Talbott Site Admin Posts: 142 Joined: Fri Mar 14, 2008 1:11 pm ----------------------------------------------------------- Re: Submerged ancient caves, pyramids, sites, cities, etc. Post by dahlenaz » Thu Apr 10, 2008 7:39 pm MGmirkin may have written or recovered the following. "Anyway, there also does seem to be considerable evidence that sea levels were considerably lower in the past. Rising sea levels appear to have "hidden" quite a bit of our past from us by submerging ancient cities and even a few caves that have been used by ancient cultures." There may be more than rising water involved in the sinking of cities. If they are on continental blocks against the atlantic or near another rift region, they may have, according to the Hydroplate theory, been taken to new depths as the continental block itself sunk into the mantel as the compressed and loaded crustal block sought equalibrium over that portion of the mantel, this followed the rifting ocean floor's bulge upward- in the absence of the same covering crust- further accelerating the crust laterally, setting it up for sudden stopage as friction increased . In the pacific region, the crust would have been pulled downward as the earth's interior shifted toward the atlantic in response to the subfloor bulge and fractured. The surrounding regions would have been affected by this subsidence which would be a vertical subsidence not subduction. Gravity measurments of the trenches indicates the absence of mass which is contradictory to what should be expected if the plates are being subducted. A serious and fair look at the hydroplate theory should be included in any consideration of what happened with the earth. d..z User avatar dahlenaz