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The Extinction of the Mammoth is a soft cover book of 300+ pages
published by The Velikovskian in 1997, and
contains a wealth of information gathered on the subject.
Did the mammoth live in Alaska and Siberia during
the Ice Age? Pollen research emphatically denies this. Could the bones,
tusks, and bodies of mammoths have been buried gradually and preserved
in the tundra? Recent studies prove this could not have occurred. Did
the poles of the Earth shift, and is there fundamental evidence to prove
this? Yes! Plant geography presents solid support that the orientation
of the poles was much less oblique when the mammoths roamed the Arctic.
The Extinction of the Mammoth outlines and
explains the historical evidence and views of science on these problems
and many, many others. It explores the scientific research that has been
gleaned over the past twenty-five years from numerous fields. It goes
well beyond to expose the inept and contradictory data used to justify
gradualism, and shows why it has failed to explain this extinction.
Evidence rarely or never analyzed is introduced
that no catastrophist researcher has ever presented. With hundreds upon
hundreds of footnotes, this book lays bare these facts. For example, in
the field of radiocarbon dating of the extinction, research has never
dealt with the phenomenon of the Seuss Effect, which introduced so much
additional Carbon 12 and 13 to the atmosphere in those ancient times
that all dates pertaining to the extinction, derived by this method,
should no longer be accepted as valid. As another example, ice core
research carried out in Greenland and Antarctica, as well as in a place
called Devil's Hole, Nevada, thoroughly discredits the Milankovitch
theory as an explanation of Ice Ages. Iridium and other materials have
been found in these ice cores that defy uniformitarian expectations. As
Walter Broecker of the Lamont-Doherty Oceanographic Observatory states:
"Climate modelers should start preparing themselves for a world without
Milankovitch."
The Extinction of the Mammoth repeatedly
breaks, new ground in catastrophist theory. The number of anomalies it
introduces to the reader is overwhelming, as well as thought provoking.
It is a book rich in evidence presented in non-technical language for the
old and new generation of catastrophists. As Richard Leakey, son of the
famous paleontologist, Louis Leakey, and Roger Lewin state:
"Catastrophism is back with us, and it is real."
Author
Charles Ginenthal is the author of Carl Sagan
and Immanuel Velikovsky and co-author of Stephen J. Gould and
Immanuel Velikovsky. He has published papers in the journals AEON,
Meta Research Bulletin and The Velikovskian. He has also
contributed to Proceedings of the Immanuel Velikovsky Centennial
1895-1995, just published. His work appears in ABA the Glory and
the Torment The Life of Dr. Immanuel Velikovsky, written by
Velikovsky's daughter Ruth Velikovsky Sharon, Ph.D. He has also
contributed to the book, Rebels & Devils: The Psychology of
Liberation, with distinguished authors as Robert Anton Wilson and
William S. Burroughs. He has presented papers at both national and
international conferences on Catastrophism and was the editor-in-chief of
the journal The Velikovskian. He resides in Forest Hills, New
York.
Contents
The Problem of the Extinction |
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