Given: Earth was once a satellite of the brown dwarf Saturn relocated when captured by Sol in the recent past
Should this not be reflected in the Vostok ice core data, which seem to go back many 100s of thousands (perhaps millions) of years?
But what we see is a repeating pattern of ice-ages that seem to match activity fluctuations in Sol
Indeed there should be no ice at all from when Earth was bathed in the corona of the Saturn-Star
The ice core data pre-dates Homo Sapiens by quite a margin
Vostok Ice Cores and the Saturn capture hypothesis
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Re: Vostok Ice Cores and the Saturn capture hypothesis
Fair question, I haven't heard anyone bring that up before. How does one explain ice that existed prior to earth's capture by sol?
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Re: Vostok Ice Cores and the Saturn capture hypothesis
The link below is divided into 9 topics concerning ice cores, each with its own link.Ice Core Evidence
Dating evidence involving ice-cores, particularly from Greenland, has been interpreted by some as absolute proof of uniformitarian dogma. Charles ginenthal's work on the topic pretty much destroys all of that.
http://www.bearfabrique.org/Catastrophi ... s/ice.html
- nick c
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Re: Vostok Ice Cores and the Saturn capture hypothesis
Apparently the link in my above post is no longer working.
The bulk of Charles Ginenthal's books and many articles were formerly available free on line, but since his death several years ago most of the links have disappeared. Too bad.
Presently most (if not all) of Ginenthal's books (he was prolific) are available for electronic purchase. They are reasonably priced.
The Ice Core article with the dead link is available as an electronic booklet for $3.99 from Barnes and Noble (Nook) or Amazon (KIndle). It is must reading for anyone who thinks that ice cores are a reliable chronological tool.
https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/ice-co ... 1123172028
https://www.amazon.com/s?k=ice+core+evi ... nb_sb_noss
If you would like a hard copy of any of Ginenthal's works you would have to buy it used on line. The books seem to be going up in price and used copys are going for $30 for an issue of his journal and $60 + for his books. They pop up here and there on ebay, or various book sellers such as ABE books and others.
The bulk of Charles Ginenthal's books and many articles were formerly available free on line, but since his death several years ago most of the links have disappeared. Too bad.
Presently most (if not all) of Ginenthal's books (he was prolific) are available for electronic purchase. They are reasonably priced.
The Ice Core article with the dead link is available as an electronic booklet for $3.99 from Barnes and Noble (Nook) or Amazon (KIndle). It is must reading for anyone who thinks that ice cores are a reliable chronological tool.
https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/ice-co ... 1123172028
https://www.amazon.com/s?k=ice+core+evi ... nb_sb_noss
If you would like a hard copy of any of Ginenthal's works you would have to buy it used on line. The books seem to be going up in price and used copys are going for $30 for an issue of his journal and $60 + for his books. They pop up here and there on ebay, or various book sellers such as ABE books and others.
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