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There May Be an Ancient Earth Inside Earth, Say Harvard Scientists

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posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 06:57 PM
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This just blew my mind! Interesting read.




A team of Harvard scientists believe the remnants of an ancient Earth, dating to the time another planet collided with ours to produce the moon, may still be lodged deep within the Earth’s mantle


ultraculture.org...


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edit on Wed Jun 18 2014 by DontTreadOnMe because: mod note



posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 07:19 PM
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That's pretty amazing. I am so in love with the Agartha theory, it isn't even funny. This would be something sort of in the same realm... kind of.

I wonder often, that if we live for millions more years, we still may not know everything about this rock that we reside on. That in itself is utterly amazing IMO.

Thanks for the share!


+13 more 
posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 07:24 PM
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Actually, the dinosaurs didn't really have to have lived here, the dead dinosaurs could have been strewn all over the planet from this collision, much later than we think. Lots of things could upend what we think of as reality.



posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 07:30 PM
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Why Does the Moon Ring Like a Bell When Apollo capsules land?
Both the Earth and Moon ring like a bell when struck by objects in their current state which leads to believe a hollow construction exists for both.
edit on 16-6-2014 by Granite because: sp


+6 more 
posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 07:46 PM
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a reply to: Granite

Just because an object rings when struck it does not means that the object is hollow.

Take a pot and fill it with water. The pot will still ring when struck.

Take a glass and fill it with sand. The glass will still ring when struck.



posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 07:46 PM
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originally posted by: rickymouse
Actually, the dinosaurs didn't really have to have lived here, the dead dinosaurs could have been strewn all over the planet from this collision, much later than we think. Lots of things could upend what we think of as reality.


I like the Dino's Are Aliens Theory. Good call!



posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 08:17 PM
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a reply to: nighthawk1954
i'm just wondering how that equates with a younger Moon, younger by 100M years

www.independent.co.uk...

Rickymouse could just be right. So here, Theia OR the Earth have the potential to be something more than a seething mass, but a solid, and the Moon, now a much younger birthchild.



edit on 16-6-2014 by smurfy because: Text.



posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 08:43 PM
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a reply to: nighthawk1954



imho, anything is possible

there is more things we can learn from this planet than we can learn from outer space

peace


+9 more 
posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 08:49 PM
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originally posted by: rickymouse
Actually, the dinosaurs didn't really have to have lived here, the dead dinosaurs could have been strewn all over the planet from this collision, much later than we think. Lots of things could upend what we think of as reality.


Uhmmmmm....the moon forming impact happened several billions of years before dinosaurs existed.......

Dinos didn't show up until about 230 million years ago.



posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 09:29 PM
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This information always gives me reverence, for we still know next to nothing. We're learning, but I'd warrant we've only hit the tip of the iceburg in terms of understanding our own home. I like to think of the perspective of 1,000 years from now... Looking back at this generation, they'll shake their heads and probably say, "They were so convinced that they knew everything." Though I bet you, they'll have just as much on their plate.

I wonder if the dinosaurs thought the world was flat?



posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 09:30 PM
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originally posted by: MagicWand67
a reply to: Granite

Just because an object rings when struck it does not means that the object is hollow.

Take a pot and fill it with water. The pot will still ring when struck.

Take a glass and fill it with sand. The glass will still ring when struck.

Those do not ring for 5 days like a hollow object does.



posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 09:36 PM
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I read this and felt sick to my stomach. LINK HERE
My first thought is that stuff that the conspiracy theorists always talk about, the lizard people? Or the green people? I can't remember. I'm scared #less. I think this triggered my paranoia. I feel so gross right now.


+16 more 
posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 09:50 PM
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Everyone, please click on the OP's link and read the article. Please.

They are not saying the Earth is hollow and that there is another "world" down there in the traditional sense.

They are saying that they think the entire Earth's crust was not turned molten when the giant impact happened, and mixed up with the mantle, but instead that a good chunk of the original Earth's crust survived.

Over time, much of that original crust subducted, and they are finding traces of it when they drill.

The article is not about a hollow Earth, or anything like that.



posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 09:52 PM
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I'm taking this one with a half grain of salt. I don't really subscribe to the hollow earth theory because astonishingly we do have pictures of north and south poles.

I also find Byrd's accounts suspect as there has been no evidence of a hardcopy ever existing, and if there was, why wouldnt they be photocopied for future reference?



posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 10:09 PM
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a reply to: eriktheawful

I think your expectations are too high. lol


I know this isn't saying anything of the sort about hollow earth.

But what do you expect when people claim the moon rang for days? That was a fun thread to read as well where people ignored the realities that were sourced on the matter.

Woohoo ATS. They should have left the deny ignorance motto up but I think it scared too many people off.



posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 10:13 PM
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a reply to: Grimpachi

It's still up.

About ATS


The simple yet effective motto of our membership is "deny ignorance", which signifies an effort to apply the principals of critical thought and peer review to the provocative topics covered within. More than a slogan, our members have embraced the motto as our collective cultural standard, demanding all to aspire to a higher standard. These simple two words have galvanized a broad membership that spans the spectrum from highly speculative conspiracy writers to staunch doubters. The result is a unique collaboration of diverse individuals rallying under this simple statement to learn from each other, discover new truths, and imagine new ideas that expand our minds.

This motto has life. It has purpose. It demands ATS members to think.

It is a state of mind.

It is a sense of purpose.

It is a statement against the paradigm.

It is a rage against the mindless status-quo.

The idea of "deny ignorance" isn't a goal that ATS hopes to accomplish. Instead, it's a challenge. A call to all those who come here to aspire to a higher state of awareness through informed discussion and debate.

Deny ignorance is what we do.

It's how we think. It's how we talk. It's how we listen.

Ignorance is the social disease of history. Is the evil that men do, the reason history repeats, and the cause of intolerance.

We deny it. it's not welcome here. Within these boundaries, it has no strength.

Here, ignorance is denied.



posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 10:19 PM
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a reply to: TheBlueShiroux

There's nothing to be scared shiiteless about.
Seriously.

I love the whole Agartha theory and while this may sound like that from just a glance... It isn't. They aren't saying that there is a whole other planet inside earth that can/does sustain life. That would be awesome though.

While I do love the idea of Agartha, I highly believe that it more than likely does not exist. We have dug deep all over the earth and not run into any evidence of another planet yet. I hold out some small amount of hope, mostly because I just like the idea and that we haven't "Journeyed to the center of earth" yet.

Nothing to be scared of here at all.



posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 10:20 PM
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a reply to: MagicWand67

What I meant is that I miss the deny ignorance banners on the pages so I could point to them in the threads when someone went Hooky.

Sometimes we need that kind of reminder.



posted on Jun, 16 2014 @ 11:39 PM
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Dinosaurs being aliens is a good twist, I LIKE IT! But didn't scientists discover some modern day animals are related to dinos? Turkey = Raptor a reply to: nighthawk1954



posted on Jun, 17 2014 @ 08:25 AM
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originally posted by: TheBlueShiroux
I read this and felt sick to my stomach. LINK HERE
My first thought is that stuff that the conspiracy theorists always talk about, the lizard people? Or the green people? I can't remember. I'm scared #less. I think this triggered my paranoia. I feel so gross right now.


Seriously anyone believe the $rap below?


My name is Colonel Billie Faye Woodard of the United States Air Force.


I mean I do have a very open mind and I've been into ufology and the rest for a very long time but this one is behind far fetched.



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