Re: ZetaTalk LIVE Chat Dec 15
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And what the Zetas said re this in the past...ZetaTalk: Comet's Tail, written prior to July 15, 1995.[link to www.zetatalk.com] The tail sweeps the Earth - dust, gases, stones and boulders all. What is the effect? The comet's moons hug close, so do not come in range, but all else is a massive onslaught on the Earth's atmosphere. The tail of the comet is composed of lighter material toward the tip, as any heavier substances that far from the great comet's gravitational influence are drawn in other directions at one point or another. Thus, the gases and dust curl toward the Earth, and are first noticeable as a fine red iron dust, turning the water a bitter blood red. Does this dust not burn in the available oxygen, and end as so many tiny flying star specs? This dust, already oxygenated, does not burn. As the comet approaches for its loop around the Sun, the next notice is of a fine gravel, dropping in places like hail stones. Why does this not burn, as meteors regularly do? Some do, but their number overwhelms the Earth's defenses, the majority not igniting at all. By this time the Earth's upper atmosphere is tearing away, dispelled into space and no longer snug as a mantle around the Earth. Now comes an occasional boulder, falling without resistance on the hapless Earth. Those who would escape the wicked lick of this tail are advised to take shelter against cliffs, in caves, in valleys, or under metal roofs. Its passage is swift, a matter of days, and the ending abrupt.
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And what the Zetas said re this in the past...ZetaTalk: Comet's Tail, written prior to July 15, 1995.[link to www.zetatalk.com] The tail sweeps the Earth - dust, gases, stones and boulders all. What is the effect? The comet's moons hug close, so do not come in range, but all else is a massive onslaught on the Earth's atmosphere. The tail of the comet is composed of lighter material toward the tip, as any heavier substances that far from the great comet's gravitational influence are drawn in other directions at one point or another. Thus, the gases and dust curl toward the Earth, and are first noticeable as a fine red iron dust, turning the water a bitter blood red. Does this dust not burn in the available oxygen, and end as so many tiny flying star specs? This dust, already oxygenated, does not burn. As the comet approaches for its loop around the Sun, the next notice is of a fine gravel, dropping in places like hail stones. Why does this not burn, as meteors regularly do? Some do, but their number overwhelms the Earth's defenses, the majority not igniting at all. By this time the Earth's upper atmosphere is tearing away, dispelled into space and no longer snug as a mantle around the Earth. Now comes an occasional boulder, falling without resistance on the hapless Earth. Those who would escape the wicked lick of this tail are advised to take shelter against cliffs, in caves, in valleys, or under metal roofs. Its passage is swift, a matter of days, and the ending abrupt.