05-06-2024, 09:20 AM
(This post was last modified: 05-06-2024, 09:20 AM by David Montaigne.)
In researching my own book on pole shifts (https://www.amazon.com/Pole-Shift-Eviden...1986785130) I stumbled onto British author Kyle Bennett, who was writing articles about pole shift evidence in 2011, including: Wandergate: The Century-long Silencing of Earth Crust Displacement - https://blog.world-mysteries.com/science...placement/ May 25, 2011
"I think it is about time to coin a new “Gate”, to describe a very old problem with mainstream science: the silencing of the theory of earth crust displacement." The pole shift theory is marginalized by absurd nonsense like anthropogenic global warming (when the warming we have now is not caused by man and is not even as warm as it was when the Vikings colonized Greenland. It is supplanted by extremely slow continental drift, which is used in a weak attempt to explain rock magnetization pointing to countless pole positions across the planet. The evidence is "smoothed out" to oblivion by suggesting there is just one "average" pole position for a given age (Cenozoic, Mezozoic, etc) and averaging dozens or hundreds of data points as if a single pole existed for millions of years - when evidence suggests it is likely that pole shifts recur approximately every 12-13,000 years. The catastrophic pole shift theory is denied as ridiculous when the idea of "ice ages" spreading arctic glaciers down to 38 degrees North latitude failed to spread down to even 70 degrees North in Siberia - where huge herds of animals grazed on huge savannahs of vegetation. Bennett wrote: "In short, the sham-science of anthropogenic global warming (AGW) was prefigured in the “cover-up” of polar wandering, which goes back well over a century."
I challenge anyone to find Kyle Bennett or his book. It looks like it was never published, and he just disappeared. If you know more about him, please comment.
"I think it is about time to coin a new “Gate”, to describe a very old problem with mainstream science: the silencing of the theory of earth crust displacement." The pole shift theory is marginalized by absurd nonsense like anthropogenic global warming (when the warming we have now is not caused by man and is not even as warm as it was when the Vikings colonized Greenland. It is supplanted by extremely slow continental drift, which is used in a weak attempt to explain rock magnetization pointing to countless pole positions across the planet. The evidence is "smoothed out" to oblivion by suggesting there is just one "average" pole position for a given age (Cenozoic, Mezozoic, etc) and averaging dozens or hundreds of data points as if a single pole existed for millions of years - when evidence suggests it is likely that pole shifts recur approximately every 12-13,000 years. The catastrophic pole shift theory is denied as ridiculous when the idea of "ice ages" spreading arctic glaciers down to 38 degrees North latitude failed to spread down to even 70 degrees North in Siberia - where huge herds of animals grazed on huge savannahs of vegetation. Bennett wrote: "In short, the sham-science of anthropogenic global warming (AGW) was prefigured in the “cover-up” of polar wandering, which goes back well over a century."
I challenge anyone to find Kyle Bennett or his book. It looks like it was never published, and he just disappeared. If you know more about him, please comment.