As early as 1669, Steno determined that every layer of the earth must have been formed horizontally by mixing with water. Shark teeth were found high in the mountains. The conclusion is that at some point seawater must have been higher than the mountains. There are now two possibilities. Either the water is lifted above the highest mountains or the land sinks under the water. Geologists have chosen the latter possibility as the indisputable reason for the formation of layers of the earth. The large number of horizontal layers on top of each other indicate that this event has occurred often. Geologists have estimated that the formation of one layer will take at least 100,000 years. Geologists apparently know nothing about the oldest history of mankind. Several ancient books speak of a cycle of seven world periods that are separated by a natural disaster. Plato tells of regularly recurring disasters involving a celestial body. Other sources tell of a planet that is approaching the earth. There are many images of that event! That planet is invisible until it is close to the sun, says Pliny. Planet 9 must therefore orbit our sun in an eccentric orbit. Then its speed during the crossing is very high. As a result, the gravitational pull on the planets near its orbit is strong. As a result, during some crossings, the water on planet Earth is pulled up very high, even "above the highest mountains" with everything that is scooped up in it. It is an extinction level event. The crossing lasts seven days. At the end the planet is covered in a thick layer of mud including remains of many land and sea animals. The layer hardens after some time and forms the next layer on top of many others. We have been able to construct a timeline in which we can see that five tidal waves are pulled over the Earth and thus five layers of the Earth are formed in a cycle of 25,200 years. Abundant and convincing evidence about this cycle of natural disasters and many images are available in the eBook: "Planet 9 = Nibiru". Search: invisible nibiru 9
@nibiruresearch4 ай бұрын
As early as 1669, Steno determined that every layer of the earth must have been formed horizontally by mixing with water. Shark teeth were found high in the mountains. The conclusion is that at some point seawater must have been higher than the mountains. There are now two possibilities. Either the water is lifted above the highest mountains or the land sinks under the water. Geologists have chosen the latter possibility as the indisputable reason for the formation of layers of the earth. The large number of horizontal layers on top of each other indicate that this event has occurred often. Geologists have estimated that the formation of one layer will take at least 100,000 years. Geologists apparently know nothing about the oldest history of mankind. Several old books speak of a cycle of seven world periods that are separated by a natural disaster. Plato tells of regularly recurring disasters involving a celestial body. Other sources tell of a planet that is approaching the earth. There are many images of that event. That planet is invisible until it is close to the sun, says Pliny. Planet 9 must therefore orbit our sun in an eccentric orbit. Then its speed during the crossing is very high. As a result, the gravitational pull on the planets near its orbit is strong. As a result, during some crossings, the water on planet Earth is pulled up very high "above the highest mountains" with everything that is scooped up in it. The peak of this phenomenon is pulled over the Earth in a corkscrew shape from East to West because the Earth simply continues to rotate while that planet passes from South to North. As a result, shallow parts of the sea on the other side of the Earth temporarily dry up. The passage lasts seven days. We have been able to construct a timeline in which we can see that five tidal waves are pulled over the Earth and thus five layers of the Earth are formed in a cycle of 25,200 years. Abundant and convincing evidence about this cycle of natural disasters and many images are available in the eBook: "Planet 9 = Nibiru". Search: invisible nibiru 9
@mickeyvlatkovich80225 ай бұрын
Very good explanations.
@wwlittle5 ай бұрын
Very nicely presented.
@PoppyCoulterHorse9 ай бұрын
Do you teach anywhere that offers online Geology degrees?
@stevecloutier94149 ай бұрын
Thanks for your superb presentation Gary !
@tariqaziz85669 ай бұрын
Thank you for very informative lecture series. Could you please make a detailed video on deep water seismic stratigraphy and sedimentology and depositional system please.
@theooidgirl Жыл бұрын
@Gary Hampson ... are these materials still available? Id love to take the course(s)... i tried the code/website, but am being denied. Thank you, in advance, for any information and assistance. And thank you for providing geoscience education/resources (like this/your videos).
@muhammadfaisalabbasi9547 Жыл бұрын
Very informative session, Thanks Gary.
@mivapusa Жыл бұрын
07:30 Much as I appreciate your enthusiasm for return of ownership to Denmark, the second Denmark you pointed out was Norway :)
@mivapusa Жыл бұрын
If KZbin has _one_ saving grace, it is the existence of videos allowing people like myself to brush up on my knowledge with professors oceans away
@buturusca Жыл бұрын
hi, just one comment from: 7:05 , if you hover on the red bar it says: Fascist models :))
@jaimevillatoro79509 ай бұрын
Probably auto populated - the CC/video chapter description bot (AI) doesn't understand the British pronunciation of facies?
@selinadiary3292 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much sir,.All of your video lectures helping me daily.
@evanbrown2594 Жыл бұрын
Stumbled across this. Very good explanation and what to look out for!
@hichembouzaya2242 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@AliMohammed-gr2tb2 жыл бұрын
why in sequences called progradation on retrogradational stratigraphy
@koksalan752 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the vide.o One question, how and more importantly why do these black lines appear on seismic, i mean what is causing them? Is it a break in deposition? Thanks
@oussamabourti2 жыл бұрын
merci beaucoup
@salihal-awami84652 жыл бұрын
👏👏👏👏
@vincentgomez3192 жыл бұрын
Awesome lecture! Thank you!
@muhammadm45822 жыл бұрын
Perfect
@jamesg54262 жыл бұрын
Thanks for a great talk Gary! This brings back fond memories of when you presented your sedimentology course to me at Imperial almost 20 years ago!
@venessamungunda54373 жыл бұрын
Good Day Very good series of videos, I just wanted to ask if I can get access to the figshare files, or have they been removed?
@alihusnain34873 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this. Great session. A HUGE thumbs up Mr. Gary.
@geologist9333 жыл бұрын
thanks could you make video about well log correlation by sequence stratigraphy please