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To: aruanan
"I just finished Catastrophe. It was quite enjoyable. The author appears to make a good case for the explosive volcanic eruption in the southwest Pacific. for the mid 6th century event. However, he seems to completely miss the evidence, presented in From Exodus to Arthur, for an extraterrestial component to the worldwide climatic disaster."

Cosmic Winter by Clube and Napier do a very good job with the celestial connection. I really liked, "Exodus To Arthur, by Mike Baillie too. He is a dendrochronologist and noted major events that were recorded in the tree ring data over the last 10k years, he then set out to see what humans had recorded during these same periods. He discovered a lot of chatter about things falling from the sky.

26 posted on 05/24/2002 11:06:32 AM PDT by blam
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To: blam
I really liked, "Exodus To Arthur, by Mike Baillie too. He is a dendrochronologist and noted major events that were recorded in the tree ring data over the last 10k years, he then set out to see what humans had recorded during these same periods. He discovered a lot of chatter about things falling from the sky.
# 26 by blam
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Shades of Velikovski, who is still called a kook, even though his major premise is now excepted by all scientists.

Catastrophic events did indeed occur in historical times, and things really did fall from the sky.

He based his theories on folklore, myths, and the published oral histories of ancient cultures.

29 posted on 11/12/2002 12:01:43 PM PST by exodus
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