mHTllmORPHIC STJIR DWllRDU C11RDOA11 Metamorphic Star Dwardu Cardona Mikamar Publishing Oregon 2011 i By the same author: God Star (2006) "Once I had God Star in my hands I could scarcely put it down. This is the most complete and articulate book on the topic I have read. It is a complete history ... of the nature of an in­ tense plasma occurrence in the Solar System as it once was at a time when mankind was pre­ sent to record it ... God Star delineates mythology from fable, setting the former as a true field of scientific enquiry. From God Star springs forth topic after topic on the physical conditions and processes our planet has undergone ... " Anthony L. Peratt, B.SEE., M.S.E.E., Ph.D (Former Scientific Advisor, United States Department of Energy) Flare Star (2007) "Flare Star is essential reading for anyone interested in geology, archaeology, paleontology, and/or the recent history of the Solar System. Cardona correlates information from astrono­ mers, geologists, plasma scientists, and from comparative mythologists to demonstrate that they use different methods but come to many similar conclusions. He notes several known problems in science that are not often stressed outside the scientific community and then pro­ vides possible explanations to said problems with one basic assumption concerning the origi­ nal plasma environment around Earth ... Although Cardona's God Star was first in the se­ ries ... a reader would not be lost starting with Flare Star. They compliment each other and both are very important books." C. J. Ransom, Ph.D (Plasma Physicist, University of Texas at Austin) Primordial Star (2008) "Cardona's work explains so many of the mysteries and anomalies of planetary science and history in a coherent and logical model. It seems that plasma and electromagnetism probably hold the key to our past as well as our future, and that the history of this planet is nothing like that portrayed by conventional wisdom. I can't recommend this book strongly enough." David Drew (Book reviewer-London-England) Copyright-2011-by Dwardu Cardona. Cover illustration by Richard M. Smith. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be produced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the written permission of the author. ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS In alphabetical order: Michael Armstrong, for bringing my works to the attention of so many. Roger Ashton, despite his dissociation from me and my work, for his translation from Sanskrit with respect to V. S. Apte's Practical Sanskrit-English Dictionary. Frederic B. Jueneman, for his input in relation to auroral matters and for spotting the odd cow flop. Ken Moss, for his help in the clarification of various technical passages as also for supplying current news items of interest. C. J. Ransom, Ph.D, for sharing the results of his research on sapphires, as also for his valuable help in various other scientific matters. Warner B. Sizemore, M.A., B.D., for furnishing me with various rare ancient works on mythology and ancient religion. Richard M. Smith, for supplying me with various illustrations including the front covers of my books. David Talbott, for his many groundbreaking insights into the Saturnian configuration scenario. Michel Tavir, for supplying me with reports of new discoveries in relation to the subjects covered in this book. Wallace Thornhill, B.Sc., for sharing his knowledge of plasma physics and discharge phenomena. Other than as noted above and in the text itself, I burden no one with the specifics presented in this work. 111 Contents PART ONE Chapter 1 Mythohistory The Cosmic Past 1 -------------------~ The Dawn of Antiquity 3 Geomythology 6 Celestial Debris 9 Sky Falls 11 Astral Myths 13 Divinities 16 Euhemerism 18 Astrogeography 20 Chapter 2 Theography Religion's Origins___________________ 22 Fear and trembling 29 Divine Diversity 30 Planetary Nomenclature 31 The Proto-Satumian Primacy 34 Saturn's Universality 37 Deistic Designation 40 Chapter 3 Ab Initio Sovereign God and Planet________________ 43 Standing Still in Heaven 44 Directional Portrayal 51 Earth's North Celestial Polar Sun 53 The Dimmer Light Environment 57 iv The Sub-Stellar Identity 58 Rising and Setting 60 Chapter4 Time Zero Transitional Disks 64 Star of the Sea 65 Designative Identities 66 Lord of the Violent Wind 67 Intense Auroral Events 71 Sustained Axial Discharges 83 The Phallic Deity 91 Divine Penal Withdrawal 94 A Time Devoid of Time 94 Chapters Day One Newcomers in an Alien System 97 The Plasmaspheric Envelope 104 Heliospheric Contact 105 The Fiat Lux 107 Inundation 111 The Greening of the Land 114 First Interlude 115 PART TWO Chapter6 Blow Outs Order Out of Chaos 120 The Voiding of the Water 121 The Unburdening of Earth's Atmosphere 123 Mother Earth in Heat 125 Chapter7 The Interglacials Temperature Reversal_s 129 v The Blytt-Semander Sequence___________ 129 The Oldest Dryas 130 The B11Slling-Aller11Sd 131 Accumulated Layers 132 Fire and Ice 133 The Younger Dryas 133 Paradigmatic Upsets 135 Chapters The Clovis Comet Death From the Sky______________ 137 Peppered Mammoths 141 The Charcoal Dispute 143 The Nanodiamond Evidence 144 Cosmic Blasts 145 Impact Craters 14 7 The Missing Cavity 149 The Great Lakes 150 Charity Shoal 150 The Carolina Bays 152 Crater Orientation 156 Additional Scars 159 A Matter ofldentity 161 Cosmic Rubble 163 The Electric Milieu 167 Chapter 9 Resetting the Record Conflagrations ________________l 70 Concentrations 171 Exterminations 172 Submergence 175 Cause and Effect 17 6 The Bays' Age 177 The Radiocarbon Dating Game 178 Dendrocatastrophism 181 Radiometric Alchemy 182 vi Chapter 10 Substellar Interactions Atmospheric Pollution. _____________186 Encircling Muck 187 Circumstellar Waste 188 Super-Flaring Dust 189 Plasmaspheric Rebounds 191 Heliospheric Skirmishes 193 Variation in Intensity 194 Exaggerated Severity 195 Back to Warmth 196 Aborted Creations 197 Traumatic Times 198 Life on the Verge 200 Theory Under Fire 203 Second Interlude 205 PART THREE Chapter 11 Start of a New Era The Hidden God---------------- 209 The Paut 213 The Dark and Evil Deity 213 The Black Planet and its God 217 The Ka'aba__________________ 219 The Black Stone_________________ 2.23 Heaven's Bolide 224 Al-Ilah 225 m~~ m Dushura 226 Al-Rukaba 227 Chapter 12 Divine Colors Blue-Black Deities---------------- 230 vii Tiruoc--------------------- nt Satum i an Blue 233 Purple Dawn 234 Messianic Hints 236 Stellar Radiation 23 7 Ultraviolet Light 239 Color Perception 241 Echoes of a Distant Past 242 Chapter 13 Heavenly Transitions Self Propagation. _________________246 Divine Parentage 24 7 Progeny's Own Progenitor 249 The Bloated Deity 250 The Logos 252 Interplanetary Discharges 259 Chapter 14 Celestial Unveilings The Spiral of Creation_______________ 265 Cosmic Emissions 274 The Eruptive Focru Point 278 Chapter 15 Serpentine Windings Dragon Lore __________________281 Cometary Portents 282 Snaky Coils 285 Feathery Snakes 286 Leviathan 288 Serpent Worship 292 Apep 297 The Serpent of Eternity 298 Serpentine Deities 299 Celestial Rivers 302 viii Intestinal Entities-------------- 302 Utu and the Antaka 309 Divine Disembowelment 310 The Winding Labyrinth 311 Behemoth 312 Epilogue Lone Travelers Through Space _________315 Dwarf Star Systems 316 Catastrophic Signs Within the Kuiper Belt 317 Alien Stars 318 Interloping Planets 318 Earth's Northern Heritage 319 Arctic Settlers 323 Cosmic Fallout 324 Man on the Move 325 Terrestrial Readjustments 326 The Emergence of Religion 327 ·Index ix PART ONE x Chapter 1 Mythohistory THE COSMIC PAST o an extent, what will be discussed in Part One of this book will be fairly new to those Twho have perused my earlier works on Earth's proto-Saturnian past. In a more general way, however, I will be taking the reader over the same ground I had covered in my previous volumes, even if I shall be doing so by traveling along different paths. There are two different reasons why this is believed to be necessary. First of all, I wish to keep my readers up to date with new discoveries in the hard sciences, many of which continue to bolster the diverse suppositions I have been presenting these many years. Secondly, I feel obliged to clarify certain issues which have been raised by others and to resolve certain objections that have been leveled at my work since the publication of my first three volumes. One major objection that has been leveled at the prequels to this work is that, despite the evidence we presented from the hard sciences, the scenario we have so far constructed is real­ ly based on nothing but mythology. It is not that we have made a secret of this and, in fact, we stressed it at the very beginning of our discourse.1 In no way have I evaded the ambiguous, sometimes even contradictory, content of mythology. Nor will I do so, since mythology is an­ ything but an open book. As Max Miiller, one of the most influential mythologists of the nine­ teenth century, admitted, "everybody who has ever thought or written on mythology has freely admitted that mythology requires an explanation."2 It thus seems that, once again, it is neces­ sary to point out what it was that led to the formulation of the world's mythological themes, which is not itself a question that has been satisfactorily answered by mythologists. As we had formerly pointed out,3 mythological texts can contain so many convoluted themes that my­ thologists often despair of making sense out of any of them. "What," for instance, asked Paul Veyne, "is to be made of this mass of nonsense?"4 "How can all this [he went on] have a meaning, a motivation, a function, or at least a structure? The question of whether myths have an authentic content can never be put in positive terms."5 1 D.
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