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Originally posted by quedup
Thanks for sharing OP - S&F - talk about 'from the horses mouth' Perhaps when a glass of milk slides of the table or we start to design furniture on the diagonal - the debunkers will finally accept that this is for real!
Originally posted by TupacShakur
reply to post by Arken
As much as I'd love to believe that the Inuit people are observationally keen enough to spot subtle changes in the night sky, I'm pretty sure Astronomers all around the globe would be the first to notice.edit on 8-7-2011 by TupacShakur because: To edit my post
Originally posted by jimmyx
i cannot understand what is being said by the OP. perhaps if conversational english can be used, it would make more sense.
Originally posted by XtraTL
This is completely idiotic. . . .
There's no reason to suppose that the earth will suddenly change its axis of rotation *ever*. We do know that historically the magnetic poles have switched at various times in a "sudden" way (it might actually take many years to happen, but that's nothing compared to how long it is between successive magnetic reversals). On the other hand, there is no reason to suspect there are any regular massive changes to the axis of the earth, and no mechanism even remotely sufficient to explain them if they did happen.
If people want to insist on posting totally ridiculous nonsense on ATS they should know what to expect.
Given that these threads have been debunked many, many times, it must be clear by now that this is nonsense. The fact that individuals keep posting them ad nauseum is grounds for a conspiracy theory in and of itself in my opinion. Why do people insist on posting this illogical nonsense? What is the motivation?
edit on 8-7-2011 by XtraTL because: (no reason given)edit on 8-7-2011 by XtraTL because: (no reason given)
Initial results out of Italy's National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology show that the 8.9-magnitude earthquake that rattled Japan Friday shifted the earth's rotation axis by about 25 centimetres.
Last year, NASA reported that a 8.8-magnitude earthquake that hit Chile shorted the day by 1.26 millionths of a second, according to computer-model calculations.
NASA had estimated that the Chilean earthquake shifted the globe's axis by about 10 centimetres, National Geographic reported at the time.
Originally posted by gremlin2011
with all due respect to the inuit people but if ware the sun sets is different then surly ware it rises shud be also different yeh??
Originally posted by XtraTL
Originally posted by quedup
Thanks for sharing OP - S&F - talk about 'from the horses mouth' Perhaps when a glass of milk slides of the table or we start to design furniture on the diagonal - the debunkers will finally accept that this is for real!
That's absolutely hilarious. Why on earth would milk slide off the table even if the poles did shift? And why on earth would we need to design furniture on the diagonal?
I do hope you were joking. If not, then please go and learn some basic science.
And logic too. After all, if we suppose for a moment that what the OP says is actually happening (it's most definitely not), then we would *already* have had a pole shift, which by your logic would mean things would *already* slide off tables. They don't, do they!?
Originally posted by Gorman91
A shift in the axis would not cause one side of the sky to keep the sun's position but the other side change. This is from continental drift however, also explaining wind changes.
Then again, we could be experiencing a greater wobble, not change in axis. This would explain GPS not showing the changes.