Re: Planet X: MAY Coordinates
In Article <[email protected]> Jos wrote:
> Zeta said the light to be reddish. You presume they meant the light
> that comes from the planet and not as seen from earth. A valid point
> I think because that would settle it /also/, so this could be included
> into your observation...?
While sorting the recent postings, I note that where the Zetas state
Planet X has a redish glow, and we know from the Jewish Exodus
descriptions that the tail has red iron dust in it (thus turning river
Nile red and the Revelations prophecy about rivers turning blood red).
Folklore, carefully documented by Velikovsky, gives us this recount.
And to those out there who want to put this scary subject aside quicky
by vilifying Velikovsky (no pun intended) for his conclusions and/or
speculations, let's just focus on the folklore he reports and the
scientific studies he references.
Worlds in Collision, The Red World
In the middle of the second millennium before the present
era, the earth underwent one of the greatest catastrophes in
its history. A celestial body ... came very close to the earth.
The account of this catastrophe can be reconstructed from
evidence supplied by a large number of documents. The
comet .. touched the earth first with it's gaseous tail. .. Servius
wrote, "It was not of a flaming but of a bloody redness."
One of the first visible signs of this encounter was the
reddening of the earth's surface by a fine dust of rusty
pigment. In sea, lake, and river this pigment gave a bloody
coloring to the water. Because of these particles of
ferruginous or other soluble pigment, the world turned red.
The Manuscript Quiche of the Mayas tells that in the Western
Hemisphere, in the days of a great cataclysm, when the earth
quaked and the sun's motion was interrupted, the water in
the rivers turned to blood.
Ipuwer, the Egyptian eyewitness to the catastrophe, wrote
his lament on papyrus, "The river is blood", and this corresponds
with the Book of Exodus 7:20: "All the waters that were in
the river were turned to blood".