-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

Home page:
http://members.macconnect.com/users/s/stargate
http://members.macconnect.com/users/s/stargate/Starburst/Starburst.shtml

 Galactic Superwaves

 One key area of Starburst research is concerned with the
 investigation of Galactic superwaves, intense cosmic ray
 particle barrages that travel to us from the center of our
 Galaxy.  See:

http://members.macconnect.com/users/s/stargate/GalacticCenter/Galacti
c.shtml

 Astronomical and geological evidence suggests that the last
 major superwave impacted around 12,000 to 16,000 years ago,
 producing abrupt changes of climate.  The land animal
 extinction episode which occurred during this interval was
 the worst in several million years.  It is estimated that
 approximately one or two superwaves strong enough to trigger
 an ice age are presently on their way to us and that there is
 a finite chance that one such cosmic event could impact the
 Solar System before the end of this century.

 The more frequent less intense events could also pose a
 threat.  There is evidence that the Galactic Center has had as
 many as ten such eruptions in the past two millennia, the most
 recent of which occurred around 700 years ago.  While these
 could have passed unnoticed in earlier centuries, today they
 could be extremely hazardous.  The electromagnetic radiation
 pulse accompanying such a superwave could knock out electrical
 power grids and communication networks on a global scale and
 possibly even inadvertently trigger nuclear missile
 launchings.  Thus the study of this phenomenon deserves a very
 high priority.

 Starburst researcher Dr. Paul LaViolette first alerted the
 scientific community to the existence of superwaves in 1983
 through papers he presented at scientific conferences held in
 the U.S. and Germany.  There he disclosed the results of
 laboratory tests carried out on samples of polar ice which
 registered prolonged periods during the last ice age when the
 Solar System was invaded by prodigious quantities of cosmic
 dust.  While he has been with Starburst, he has presented his
 findings at scientific conferences and has published several
 papers on these findings.  In his book Earth Under Fire he
 explains his discoveries and also examines the estensive
 record of this event memorialized in ancient myth and legend.

http://members.macconnect.com/users/s/stargate/LaVioletteBooks/Book-E
UF.shtml

 Additional ice core research is planned to follow up this
 important discovery.  Currently, Starburst has in storage 17
 ice samples cut from the Vostok antarctic ice core.  Analysis
 of these samples should provide valuable information about
 past changes in interplanetary dust concentration and their
 possible effects on the Earth's climate and biosphere.


~~~~~~~


http://members.macconnect.com/users/s/stargate/LaViolette/Predict.shtml

           Paul LaViolette's Scientific Predictions and
                  their Subsequent Verification

                     Part I (1979 to Present)

   Galactic core explosions -- prevailing concept (1980):  At the
   time of this prediction, astronomers believed that the cores of
   galaxies, including our own, become active ("explode") about
   every 10 to 100 million years and stay active for about a million
   years. Since our own Galactic core presently appears quiescent,
   they believed it would likely remain inactive for many tens of
   millions of years. Although, in 1977, astronomer Jan Oort cited
   evidence that our Galactic core has been active within the past
   10,000 years.

 Prediction No. 1 (1980 - 83):  In his Ph.D. dissertation,
 LaViolette hypothesized that galactic core explosions recur about
 every 10,000 years and last for several hundred to a few thousand
 years. He was the first to suggest such a short recurrence time for
 galactic core explosions and that our own Galactic core undergoes
 Seyfert-like explosions with similar frequency.

http://members.macconnect.com/users/s/stargate/GalacticCenter/Galacti
c.shtml

   Subsequent concurrence (1998):  In 1988, when presented with
   Dr. LaViolette's Galactic explosion hypothesis, astronomer Mark
   Morris dismissed the idea as having no merit. However, in 1998
   after ten years of observation, Morris was quoted in Discover
   magazine as saying that the center of our Galaxy explodes about
   every 10,000 years with these events each lasting 100 years or so.
   Dr. LaViolette's work was not cited in the article.

                          -------=====-------

   Cosmic ray propagation -- prevailing concept (1980 - 83):
   At the time of this prediction, astronomers believed that
   interstellar magnetic fields entrap cosmic rays released from
   Galactic core outbursts and slow their outward progress so that
   they reach the Earth after millions of years in the form of a
   constant low intensity background radiation.

 Prediction No. 2 (1980 - 83):  Dr. LaViolette's studies concluded
 that Galactic center cosmic ray volleys interact minimally with
 interstellar magnetic fields and are able to propagate radially
 outward along rectilinear trajectories traveling through the Galaxy
 at near light speed in the form of a coherent, spherical, wave-like
 volley. He was the first to suggest this idea of a "Galactic
 superwave."

   Verification (1985):  Astrophysicists discovered that X-ray
   pulsars continuously shower the Earth with high-energy cosmic ray
   particles that have traveled over 25,000 light-years at nearly
   the speed of light, following straight-line trajectories
   unaffected by interstellar magnetic fields.

   Verification (1997):  Astrophysicists detected a strong gamma ray
   pulse arriving from a galaxy billions of light years away having
   a redshift of 3.4 (see Prediction No. 10 below). Mainstream
   media, such as Sky & Telescope magazine, suggested that this
   gamma ray pulse may be accompanied by a volley of high energy
   cosmic ray particles travelling at very close to the speed of
   light along a rectilinear trajectory and that the gamma ray pulse
   is produced by the radial outward movement of this volley. In
   effect, they were restating the same Galactic superwave idea that
   LaViolette had proposed 14 years earlier in the face of stiff
   resistance from mainstream astronomers.

                          -------=====-------

   Cosmic ray bombardment -- prevailing concept (1980 - 83):
   At the time of this prediction, astronomers believed that the
   background cosmic ray flux has remained constant for millions
   of years, that intense cosmic ray bombardments occur very
   infrequently, perhaps every 30 million years, primarily as
   a result of nearby supernova explosions.

 Prediction No. 3 (1980 - 83):  LaViolette concluded that a volley
 of Galactic cosmic rays had bombarded the Earth and solar system
 toward the end of the last ice age (ca. 14,000 years BP). Also his
 findings suggested that other such superwaves had passed us at
 earlier times and were responsible for triggering the initiation
 and termination of the ice ages and mass extinctions. He was the
 first to suggest recurrent highly-frequent cosmic ray bombardment
 of the Earth.

   Verification (1987):  Glaciologists discovered beryllium-10
   isotope peaks in ice age polar ice. These indicated that the
   cosmic ray flux on the Earth became very high on several
   occasions during the last ice age, confirming Dr. LaViolette's
   theory that Galactic superwaves have repeatedly passed through
   our solar system in geologically recent times.

                          -------=====-------

   Cosmic debris around solar system -- prevailing concept (1980-83):
   At the time of this prediction, astronomers believed that the
   solar system resided in a relatively dust free region of space.

 Prediction No. 4 (1980 - 83):  LaViolette hypothesized that large
 amounts of interstellar dust and frozen cometary debris lie outside
 the solar system just beyond the heliopause sheath and form a
 reservoir of material that would have supplied large amounts of
 cosmic dust during a prehistoric superwave event.

   Verification (1984):  The IRAS satellite team published infrared
   observations showing that the solar system is surrounded by
   nearby "cirrus" dust cloud wisps.

   Verification (1988):  Astronomer H. Aumann's observations
   suggested that the solar system is surrounded by a dust envelope
   500 times denser than previously thought.

   Verification (1992-95):  Telescope observations revealed the
   presence of the Kuiper belt, a dense population of cometary
   bodies encircling the solar system, beginning just beyond the
   orbit of Neptune and extending outward past the heliopause
   sheath.

                          -------=====-------

   Cosmic dust influx -- prevailing concept (1979):  At the time of
   this prediction, astronomers believed that the rate at which
   cosmic dust particles have been entering the solar system and the
   Earth's atmosphere has remained constant for millions of years.
   They believed that the solar system lies in a relatively clean
   interstellar space environment and hence that there is no need to
   expect the occurrence of recent cosmic dust incursions.

 Prediction No. 5 (Sept. 1979):  LaViolette theorized that if a
 cosmic ray volley (superwave) had passed by at the end of the ice
 age, it would have pushed nearby interstellar dust into the solar
 system. To test this, he began a plan to analyze ice age polar ice
 for traces of cosmic dust.

   Verification (1981 - 82):  LaViolette was the first to measure
   the extraterrestrial material content of prehistoric polar ice.
   Using the neutron activation analysis technique, he found high
   levels of iridium and nickel in 6 out of the 8 polar ice dust
   samples (35k to 73k yrs BP), an indication that they contain high
   levels of cosmic dust. This showed that Galactic superwaves may
   have affected our solar system in the recent past. In addition,
   he discovered gold in one 50,000 year old sample, making this the
   first time gold had been discovered in polar ice.

   Verification (1984):  The IRAS satellite team reported
   observations that the zodiacal dust cloud is tilted 3 degrees
   relative to the ecliptic with ascending and descending ecliptic
   nodes at 87� and 267�, but failed to draw a conclusion from this
   finding. LaViolette realized that the nodes are aligned with the
   Galactic-center-anticenter direction in support of his earlier
   prediction that interstellar dust has recently entered the solar
   system from the Galactic center direction. 1987:  He published a
   paper in Earth, Moon, and Planets journal explaining that the
   orientation of the zodiacal dust cloud nodes indicates that this
   zodiacal dust recently entered from the direction of the Galactic
   center.

   Verification (April 1993):  NASA's Ulysses spacecraft team
   published observations indicating that interstellar dust is
   currently entering the solar system from the Galactic center
   direction (from the direction the interstellar wind blows
   towards us) and hence that most of the dust outside the asteroid
   belt is of interstellar origin. Their findings were predicted by
   LaViolette's 1983 and 1987 publications. One Ulysses team member
   had received Dr. LaViolette's publications in 1985, but
   LaViolette's work was not cited.

http://members.macconnect.com/users/s/stargate/LaViolette/Pub-frame.spml

   Verification (1995):  Cosmochemists publish observations showing
   that Helium-3 concentrations in ocean sediments, an indicator of
   extraterrestrial dust influx, changed by over 3 fold on a 100,000
   year cycle between 250,000 and 450,000 years ago.

   Verification (1996):  The AMOR radar in New Zealand detected a
   strong flux of interstellar meteoroid particles, measuring 15 to
   40 microns in size, entering the solar system from the Galactic
   center direction.

                          -------=====-------

   Tin isotopic anomaly -- state of the art (1981):  At the time
   of this prediction, astronomers speculated that tin found in
   extraterrestrial material could have isotope ratios different
   from those of terrestrial tin. But up until that time no tin
   isotopic anomalies had been reported.

 Prediction No. 6 (1981):  Having found very high concentrations
 of tin in a 50,000 year old ice core dust sample along with gold,
 silver, antimony, iridium, and nickel, LaViolette theorized that
 this tin-rich dust was of interstellar origin and that the tin
 might contain an isotopic anomaly.

   Verification (Jan. 1984):  Geochemists at Curtin University
   (Australia) in collaboration with LaViolette used a mass
   spectrometry technique to determine the isotopic ratios of an
   unirradiated portion of the tin-rich dust sample. They found
   significant isotopic anomalies in four isotopes thereby
   confirming LaViolette's prediction that the tin dust is of
   extraterrestrial origin. This marked the first time that tin
   isotopic anomalies had been discovered.

   Indirect support (1989):  Cosmochemist F. Rietmeijer published
   a paper describing the discovery of tin oxide grains inside
   interplanetary dust particles, with tin abundances much higher
   than typically found in chondritic meteorites. This helps to
   substantiate LaViolette's 1983 claim that the solar system is
   surrounded by dust enriched in tin and that this is the source
   of the tin-rich dust found in polar ice.

                          -------=====-------

   Prehistoric global warming -- prevailing concept (1981):
   At the time of this prediction, climatologists believed that the
   Aller�d-B�lling warming and Younger Dryas cold period at the end
   of the ice age were confined primarily to Europe. They assumed
   that there was no global warming at the end of the ice age, that
   the northern continental ice sheets did not melt synchronously
   with the southern ice sheets, and that the warming in the north
   was due to heat being drawn from the Southern Hemisphere.

 Prediction No. 7 (1983):  In his dissertation, LaViolette
 demonstrated that the last ice age was ended by a 2000 year long
 global warming which he calls the Terminal Pleistocene Interstadial
 (TPI) identified with the Aller�d-B�lling interstadial in the north.
 He also proposed that this was followed by a global return to
 glacial conditions, identified with the Younger Dryas in the north.
 He showed that the melting of the ice sheets was synchronous in the
 northern and southern hemispheres and was brought about by cosmic
 causes.

   Verification (1987-96):  Climatologists published temperature
   profiles from various parts of the world showing the presence of
   this same climatic oscillation, but did not connect their data
   with the idea of global climatic shifts.

   Verification (1998):  Climatologists (Steig et al.) published
   findings in Science demonstrating the synchronous occurrence of
   the Aller�d-B�lling-Younger Dryas climatic oscillation in the
   Taylor Dome Antarctic ice core. They claimed this as evidence
   that the last ice age was ended by a global warming. Although
   they were aware of LaViolette's publications, their report did
   not cite his prior work.

                          -------=====-------

   Prehistoric solar conflagration -- prevailing concept (1983):
   At the time of LaViolette's prediction, the general opinion was
   that the Sun has remained in its present quiescent solar cycle
   state for hundreds of millions of years. A small group of
   astronomers, however, dissented with this view. For example, in
   1969, astrophysicist Thomas Gold published lunar rock evidence
   indicating that, within the last 30,000 years, the radiation
   intensity on the Moon had reached 100 suns for 10 to 100 seconds,
   possibly due to a solar nova. In 1975, astronomer A. Lovell
   suggested that sun-like stars occasionly produce flares of up to
   10^37 ergs, 30,000 times more energetic than the largest solar
   flare of modern times. In 1977, astrophysicists Wdowczyk and
   Wolfendale suggested that the Sun might produce a flare a million
   times larger (3X10^38 ergs) about once every 100,000 years.
   Moreover in 1978, NASA astronomers Zook, Hartung, and Storzer had
   published lunar rock evidence indicating that 16,000 years ago
   solar flare background radiation intensity on the Moon's surface
   had peaked to 50 times the current intensity and that this may
   have been somehow associated with the retreat of the ice sheets.
   The idea that the Earth and Moon might have been affected in the
   past by the arrival of a giant solar coronal mass ejection had
   not yet been advanced.

 Prediction No. 8 (1983):  In chapter 4 of his dissertation,
http://members.macconnect.com/users/s/stargate/Superwave/Ch4.spml
 LaViolette proposed the idea that the Earth and Moon may have been
 engulfed by a large prominence remnant "fireball" (coronal mass
 ejection) thrown out by the Sun during a period of particularly
 intense solar activity. He interpreted the findings of Zook and
 Gold as evidence that the Sun had been in a highly active T-Tauri
 like flaring state and had at times its flaring activity had been
 as much as 1000 times that currently observed. He suggested that
 these may have scorched the surface of the Earth in ancient times,
 inducing high temperatures, rapid ice sheet melting, global
 flooding, and mass animal extinction.

   Concordance (1997):  Satellite observations showed solar flares
   ejecting expanding balls of plasma called "coronal mass
   ejections"and demonstrated that these were capable of travelling
   outward beyond the Earth's orbit. This lent credance to
   LaViolette's theory that a large coronal plasma "fireball" thrown
   off by an immense solar flare may have reached the Earth and Moon
   and scorched their surfaces.

   Concordance (1999):  Astronomers announced that they had observed
   large explosive outbursts from the surfaces of nearby normal
   sunlike stars. These "superflares" were observed to range from
   100 to 10 million times the energy of the largest flare observed
   on the Sun in modern times and were estimated to occur about once
   every hundred years. This confirmed the Lovell hypothesis and
   increased the plausibility of LaViolette's suggestion that the
   Sun was producing mega solar flares and intense plasma fireballs
   at the end of the last ice age.

                          -------=====-------

   Geomagnetic reversals -- prevailing concept (1983):  At the
   time of LaViolette's prediction, geophysicists believed that
   geomagnetic reversals and magnetic polarity flips were brought
   about by causes internal to the Earth, that they arose from
   instabilities in the inner rotation of the Earth's core magnetic
   dynamo. They believed that these field excursions took hundreds
   of years to occur due to the inherently slow movement of the
   core material.

 Prediction No. 9 (1983):  In chapter 3 of his dissertation,
http://members.macconnect.com/users/s/stargate/Superwave/Ch3.spml
 LaViolette proposed that geomagnetic reversals are induced by solar
 cosmic ray storms. He proposed that at times when invading cosmic
 dust causes the Sun to become very active and engage in continual
 flaring activity, major solar outbursts could occur that are a
 thousand times more intense than those currently observed. Further
 he proposed that solar cosmic rays from such a mega flare could
 impact the Earth's magnetosphere, become trapped there to form
 storm-time radiation belts, and generate an equatorial ring current
 producing a magnetic field opposed to the Earth's. If sufficiently
 intense, this ring current magnetic field could cancel out the
 Earth's own field and flip the residual magnetic field pole to an
 equatorial location. From this position it could later either
 recover or adopt a reversed polarity. He proposed that this
 geomagnetic excursion would be very rapid, occurring in a matter
 of days.

   Verification (1989 - 95):  Geophysicists reported their analysis
   of a geomagnetic reversal recorded in the Steens Mountain lava
   formation, conclusively demonstrating that during this reversal
   the Earth's magnetic pole changed direction as fast as 8 degrees
   per day. This overthrew the conventional geocentric view which
   could not account for such rapid changes with internal motions of
   the Earth's core dynamo. It confirmed Dr. LaViolette's mechanism
   of rapid change.

   Concordance (1995):  Unaware of LaViolette's publications, two
   French geophysicists published a paper that sought to explain the
   Steens Mountain polarity reversal as being due to a solar cosmic
   ray cause. Their mechanism was the same as that which LaViolette
   had proposed 6 years before the Steens Mountain discovery. Their
   independent arrival at the same idea is evidence of parallel idea
   development and consensus with LaViolette's earlier theory.

                          -------=====-------

   Radiocarbon date anomalies -- prevailing concept (1983):
   At the time of this proposal, the idea that anomalously young
   radiocarbon dates might be produced by intense solar cosmic ray
   bombardments had not been suggested. Such young dates were
   thought to be due to sample contamination with younger carbon
   having a higher C-14 content.

 Prediction No. 10 (1983):  Anomalously young radiocarbon dates
 are frequently found in fossil remains of Pleistocene megafauna
 that became extinct at the end of the last ice age.
 In chapter 10 of his dissertation
http://members.macconnect.com/users/s/stargate/Superwave/Ch10.spml ,
 LaViolette proposed that a solar cosmic ray
 conflagration caused the demise of these mammals and their
 subsequent burial by the action of glacier meltwater waves. He
 suggested that the neutron shower produced by the intense solar
 cosmic ray storm (coronal mass ejection) that engulfed the Earth
 would have radiogenically changed nitrogen atoms in animal collagen
 into carbon-14 atoms. He proposed that this in situ radiocarbon
 generation could have made the radiocarbon dates on exposed organic
 matter anomalously young.

   Verification (1998):  After conducting seven years of research,
   archeologist William Topping
 <http://topping.www-user.imagiware.com/evidence.htm> proposed
   that the abnormally young radiocarbon dates of ice age
   Paleo-Indian sites (ca. 12,400-13,000 calendar yrs BP) could be
   explained if a major solar flare cosmic ray particle storm had
   caused in situ carbon-14 production from nitrogen in the organic
   remains of those strata. His conclusion of heavy particle
   bombardment in Paleo-Indian times was partly supported by his
   discovery of particle tracks and micrometeorite craters in
   artifacts. This in situ C-14 production mechanism is the same
   that LaViolette had earlier proposed to explain the young dates
   for Pleistocene mammal remains dating from a similar period.
   Like Topping, LaViolette had concluded that the demise of the
   large mammals at that time was due to a solar flare
   conflagration. Since Topping was probably not aware of
   LaViolette's dissertation, his work would constitute independent
   corroboration.

   Concordance (1995 - 1998):  Researchers report the discovery that
   there had been a sudden increase in atmospheric radiocarbon
   levels at the Aller�d/Younger Dryas transition boundary. Over a
   300 year period between the time of the IntraAllerod Cold Peak
   and the beginning of the Younger Dryas, atmospheric C-14 levels
   rose from 3 to 7 % and subsequently declined during the course of
   the Younger Dryas.

                          -------=====-------

   Gamma ray bursts -- prevailing concept (1983):  During the
   early 1970's, astronomers discovered the Earth is sporadically
   bombarded by gamma ray bursts. At the time of this prediction,
   they incorrectly assumed that gamma ray bursts were medium energy
   events originating from local sources within our Galaxy. They did
   not regard them as a significant social threat.

 Prediction No. 11 (1983):  In his dissertation, LaViolette
 proposed that a superwave produced by an explosion of our Galaxy's
 core could be immediately preceded by a very strong gamma ray
 pulse, 10,000 times stronger than what could come from a supernova
 explosion. He pointed out that upon impacting our upper atmosphere
 this burst could strip electrons and induce a powerful
 electromagnetic pulse which, like a high-altitude nuclear EMP,
 could have serious consequences for modern society. It could knock
 out satellites, interrupt radio, TV, and telephone communication,
 produce electrical surges on power lines causing widespread black
 outs, and possibly trigger the inadvertent launching of missiles.
 He was among the few to suggest that Galactic core explosions
 could produce high intensity gamma ray outbursts that could affect
 the Earth.

 In 1989, under the sponsorship of the Starburst Foundation,
 LaViolette initiated an international outreach project, to warn
 about the dangers of such astronomical phenomena. He pointed out
 that our Galactic center could produce seriously disruptive low
 intensity outbursts as frequently as once every 500 years and that
 we are currently overdue for one. This was the first time a
 widespread gamma ray pulse warning of this sort had been made.

   Verification (1997):  In December 1997, astronomers for the first
   time pinpointed the source of a gamma ray burst and found that it
   originated from a galaxy lying billions of light years away. This
   led them to conclude that these are mostly extragalactic events
   having total energies millions of times greater than they had
   previously supposed, thereby confirming LaViolette's earlier
   proposal of the existence of high intensity gamma ray bursts. If
   this particular outburst had originated from our Galactic center,
   it would have delivered 100,000 times the lethal dose to all
   exposed Earth life forms.

   Verification (1998):  Some months later, in August 27, 1998,
   a 5 minute long gamma ray pulse arrived from a Galactic source
   located 20,000 light years away in the constellation of Aquila.
   The event was strong enough to ionize the upper atmosphere and
   seriously disrupt satellites and spacecraft. It triggered a
   defensive instrument shutdown on at least two spacecraft.
   Astronomers acknowledged that this marked the first time they
   became aware that energetic outbursts from distant astronomical
   sources could affect the Earth's physical environment. These
   events reaffirmed the validity of warnings LaViolette made 9
   years earlier about the potential hazards of such gamma ray
   bursts.

                          -------=====-------

   Archeoastronomy -- prevailing concept (1979):  At the time of
   this prediction, ancient historians, cultural anthropologists and
   scholars of esoteric traditions did not suspect that ancient myth
   makers knew the location of the Galactic center or that they had
   associated this part of the sky with the cataclysmic cycles
   described in legend.

 Prediction No. 12 (1979):  LaViolette found that ancient star lore
 indicated the location of the Galactic center and that myths,
 customs and esoteric lore descendent from prehistoric times
 indicated that cosmic rays from a Galactic core explosion
 catastrophically affect the Earth and solar system in recurrent
 cycles with the most recent event occurring near the end of the
 last ice age. He wrote up this idea in an unpublished paper in 1979
 and formally published these ideas in 1995 and 1997 in his books
 Beyond the Big Bang
http://members.macconnect.com/users/s/stargate/LaVioletteBooks/Book-B
BB.shtml
 and Earth Under Fire.
http://members.macconnect.com/users/s/stargate/LaVioletteBooks/Book-E
UF.shtml
 In Earth Under Fire he also connected Mayan cosmology and World
 Ages with the Galactic center and Galactic superwave events. He
 began discovering these associations around 1987.

   Concordance (1994 - 1998):  In a December 1994 magazine article
   and later in his book Maya Cosmogenesis 2012
 <http://www.earthportals.com/Earthportals/Portal_Market/cosmogen.html>
   (1998), John Major Jenkins presented his findings that Mayan lore
   contains a Galactic center oriented cosmology. That specifically
   refers to the Galactic center vicinity (ecliptic-Galactic plane
   crossing point) in connection with the occurrence of the Mayan
   World Ages. One of his findings is that the Mayan calendar 2012
   AD end date, which designates the end of the present World Age,
   also indicates the time when the Earth's precessing axis will be
   maximally tipped in the direction of this Galactic plane
   intersection point. Jenkins was not aware of LaViolette's work at
   the time he wrote, so his findings constitute an instance of
   independent discovery and corroboration. Jenkins went into much
   greater depth in exploring Mayan cosmological references to the
   Galactic center, but did not explore the Galactic explosion/Earth
   cataclysm theme discovered by LaViolette.


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------

 Morphogenic Resonance or a Plethora of
 Galactic Center Disinformation? :

http://members.macconnect.com/users/s/stargate/LaViolette/Disinformat
ion.shtml

 ---------------------------------------------------------------------



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