I don't believe I have seen this sight before. Why do these Karmi's keep
messing with Mars? This is an awsome and powerful "Martial" planet don't they
fools know any better?
The following comments are from www.ourhollowearth.com , chapter two.
Amazing that there is so much fresh water ice in the salty Arctic. Read on
to realize the significance.
DD
However, not only does wildlife, and warm winds and fog come out of the
north, but evidence points to the origin of icebergs in the far northland.
The north polar sea is covered by ice which is frozen from fresh water and
floats on a salty sea. The origin of so much ice that it covers thousands of
square miles, has been a long-time puzzle to scientists. The fact is that
salty sea water does not freeze solid at temperatures found at the poles.
The ice that covers the Arctic Ocean is salt-less. Explorer Nansen noticed
that the icebergs in the Arctic Ocean are stratified and that they often
contain driftwood, clay and rocks. This obviously indicates that these
icebergs originate in rivers which have slowly frozen over causing the
stratification layers of water freezing as it flowed over ice wedged between
it's banks, where rocks and clay were scraped off when the bergs eventually
were pushed out to sea. However, there are not enough rivers or even
glaciers around the polar sea to give origin to so much ice. So where do the
icebergs come from?
A writer named William Reed, wrote in his book, PHANTOM OF THE POLES, in
1906 of his theory that these icebergs that fill the Arctic Ocean actually
come from inside Our Hollow Earth.
More from Rod's site in relation to the last post.
DD
Because of the earth's 23� degree inclination to the plane of its orbit
about the sun, the sun's rays, once each year, strike the polar lip at right
angles melting the ice loose at the mouths of the inner-earth rivers within
the polar openings which then empty their fresh water icebergs into the
Arctic and Antarctic oceans.
Again from Rod's site:
Several accounts of explorers reaching this open sea on the other side of
the ice is found in a book by Dr. D. Barrington, THE POSSIBILITY OF
APPROACHING THE NORTH POLE ASSERTED, published in 1818 in New York. Dr.
Barrington writes that in 1751 a Captain MacCallam commanding a whaler,
during a lull in the usual business of the voyage, thought he would make a
dash for the North Pole. He reached a latitude of 83 degrees and found in
front of him no further ice. In fact they had not seen a speck of ice for
the last three degrees, he reported. But had to abandon his adventure as he
did not wish to incur the displeasure of his owners.
Another voyage by a Dr. Dallie of Holland on a Dutch warship in supervision
of the Greenland fisheries reached a latitude of 88 degrees and reported
that the weather was warm, and the sea perfectly free from ice. Dallie
pressed the captain to proceed but the captain felt he had already gone too
far by having neglected his station.
Then a Mr. Stephens, sailing on another Dutch ship in 1754 was driven into
latitude 84� degrees north and reported that they did not find the cold
excessive, used little more than common clothing, met with but little ice,
and even less ice the father northward they went.
List Members,
Here is a little piece from Rod M. Cluff's site informing us of warm
temperatures near the Northern part of Greenland, and suggesting where their
origin might be. Perhaps we now have a credible rationale for the type of
vegetation mentioned in the appendix below, which I scanned from the book
Four Years in the White North. We have already seen a bit of material along
these lines.
" The fact that these winds from the polar areas which cause the auroral
displays to variate are warm is further evidence that the north wind
originates in the earth's interior where the interior sun warms them.
Concerning this warm wind, explorer Peary writes on pages 214 and 215 of his
work: "I expected to hear later of our February foehn in other parts of
Greenland, and I was not disappointed. Lieutenant Ryder was living for nine
months at Scoresby Sound, on the coast of East Greenland, while we were at
McCormick Bay. He was about four hundred and fifty geographical miles south
of us. The maximum temperatures he recorded occurred in February and May. He
says (Petermanns Mittheilungen, XI, 1892, p. 256) that these high
temperatures were due to severe foehn storms, one of which, in February
suddenly, raised the thermometer to 50 F, 8 degrees higher than my
instruments had recorded." Foehn storms are warm winded storms which come
out of the north (Arctic) in winter.
APPENDIX V ( to Four Years in the White North by Admiral MacMillan
THE VEGETATION ABOUT BORUP LODGE
By W. ELMER EKBLAW
That such a relatively luxurient vegetation as that which is found about our
headquarters in Northwest Greenland can grow so near the Pole surprises and
interests most people who learn of the green patches of dandelion, the
smiling fields of golden poppies, and the verdant slopes of lush blue grass,
flourishing almost a thousand miles within the Arctic Circle [ and only
about 700 from the pole ]. That mushrooms as wide as dinner plates and as
delicious as our meadow mushrooms; that ferns as dainty and as beautiful as
those of our mountain woods; that buttercups as bright and glistening as
those of our prairie stream-banks, that bluebells and rhodrodendon and
heather and many others- all find in the continuous sunshine of the Arctic
summer sufficient heat and light not only to grow but to thrive, and to
reproduce themselves, amazes almost everyone but the professional botanist.
True, it is only in favorable spots that all those plants grow, but even so,
there are few areas so rocky, or so cold, or so wind-swept that not any
plants can find a plane for themselves. If nothing else grows, the lichens,
at least. are sure to cover the rocks. But almost everywhere some of the
hardies flowers or grasses appear, sometimes dwarfed, it is true, but
vigorous, for all that.
Within the limits of Northwest Greenland- that is, between the great
glaciers of Melville Bay on the South and the Humboldt Glacier on the North-
I collected over one hundred and twentv-five species of vascular plants. A
number of these had before been recorded from this area, and one had not
before been found in Greenland. This last, Androsace Septentrionalis, a
deli-cate, inconspicuous little flower, I found growing on a gravel slope
within a hundred yards of Borup lodge. The mushrooms are not numerous, but
the lichens are legion.
The forests of that far Northland do not appreciably obstruct the view, nor
does the shrubbery afford much cover. The biggest rees do not rise more than
do not rise more than above the rocks on which they grow, even though their
branches may spread over a square yard of surface, and the biggest shrub
grows hardly so large as a croquet ball. The commoner trees are the Arctic
willow ( Salix Arctica ), the little two- or three-leaved wil[ow (Salix
Herbacea ), and the tiny dwarf Birch ( Betula Nana ). In fact, there are no
others. Some of the Arctic willow, though over fifty years old, have a stem
no thicker than my little finger. Salix Herbacea is tiny indeed, rarely
more than a half inch high.
Of shrubs, the most interesting is the Lapland Rhododenron. On a few
she!-tered slopes, where the sun shines warm and the snow does not lie too
long, this little bush blooms profusely, its tiny twngs set with numerous
little rose-purple blossoms scarcely a quarte of an inch wide. Two species
of cranberry ( Myrtillus Uliginosa and Vaccinium vitisidraea) neither
fruitIng except in unusually unusually favorable seasons, grow in the area,
though the latter is rare. The curlewberry ( Empetrum nigrum ) blooms on
sunny heaths in some deep fjords, but rarely sets fruit.
The trees and shrubs, if they may be called such, are generally found on the
Arctic heaths, where they asso-ciate with other plants partial to long,
sunny slopes. The golden northern arnica ( Arnien Cipina), so like a
diminuitive sunflower, in its habits and appearance; the wooly catspaw
Antennaria alpine ), for all the world resembling its cousins in the
Southland, the tiny Arctic bluebell ( Campanula uniflora ), dainty and
gentian blue; the elicate pink and white shinleaf ( Pyrola rotundiflora );
and the pretty dark-purple grass ( Trisetum Spicatum ) are conspicuous
members of this heath-forming group, of which the creamv white
bell-flowered Andromeda ( Cassiope Tetragona ) is the characteristic
flower.
The cress family is represented by 16 species, ...
The dandelions about our lodge at Etah are note-worthy. In addition to
several species of the yellow, a delicate form, white with pink border,
known from no other place in the world, grows luxurient.
The brightest, bravest flower of all the Northland is the cheery Arctic
Poppy. Up to the fartherst North point of land yet attained, this sturdy
flower maintains itself against the snow and ice; no coast is too desolate,
no mountain too bleak, to sustain it; the coldest winds, the fiercest snows,
do not daunt it. It grows in profusion on the delta about our lodge, and on
the stream-side meadows back in the mountains, whole fields ablaze
throughout the summer. The poppy should be the national flower of Eskimo
Land, the land of Ultima Thule!
Grasses grow in abundance ... numerous blue grasses grow in Greenland ...
And besides these there are downy, white cotton grass ...
Four ferns grow on the rock ledges. Aspidian Fragans, a sweet-smelling fern
of drier ledges, is common on the sunny ledges just above Borup lodge.
Cystopteris fragilis is the commonest fern throughout Northwest Greenland.
It grows most abundant and luxuriently in moist crevices on steep cliffs.
Woodsiagabela is a Lilliputian fern, not more than an inch high, and
Woodsia ilvensis is not much larger.
As soon as the snow begins melt, the plants begin to bloosom. The first
flowers at Etah [ 79* North ] usually open a few days before the first of
June, a month and a half after the midnight sun has begun. Some species are
often retarded by the heavy summer snows, so that they hardly have time to
bloosom at all, for the killing frost begin to come about two weeks before
the last midnight sun. Even before the first of August the autumnal yellows
and tans and browns come, and growth is at an end. The season of life is
brief, indeeld, but under the daily bright twenty-four-hour sun the Arctic
plants, nearly all like those of our early Spring, come to rapid maturity.
Though all these plants grow rather luxuriently about our lodge, they
scarcely begin to hide the nakedness of the rugged slopes and rocky cliffs
and plateaus; yet to us who lived among them for four years, they are as
beautiful and dear as our trees and shrubs and grasses and flowers of the
Southland. They grow bravely in the face of almost impossible conditions,
courageous guradians of life in the cold, killing North.
DD,
I was thinking of something (uh oh!). Do you know that holy spot in Israel
that the Muslims and Jews fight over? The one where the M's claim Mohamed
accended in a space craft and the Jews have another significant meaning to
it. I'm wondering if that is just a capped over hollow earth entrance.
There
had to be many tunnels where travelling to and fro was taking place other
than the poles, and I'm sure they were all capped over by the powers that
be.
Madhava,
I don't doubt that it could be over one of those places. You know, nearby in
Egypt there is quite an underground complex of tunnels and such connecting
the Pyramids.
I think that there were various entrances all over the world. Some regions
in Tibet are known to have entrances, but who knows exactly where?
DD