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Overview image of the Impact and Exit Event.

THE IMPACT AND EXIT EVENT

An amazingly simple explanation of how a large section of today's Science

is based upon flawed information and incorrect assumptions.

 

 

 

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Sample from 'The Biggest Clue Ever':

...Travelling throughout the Canadian Rockies, everywhere I went the view was the same; spectacular, high rocky peaks that were always accompanied (visually) by underlying substrata layers that seemed to imply that at some point in the past the entire mountain area on view had previously lain in a horizontal state.

Clearly, both sides of the many valleys we travelled throughout the journey were at one time connected to each other as flat land. The evidence for this was easy to see, very abundant and undeniable.

Apart from the jagged ‘inner’ face of the mountain peaks where the telltale linear substrata is visible there are other features that are also visible: on the ‘outer’ slopes of every rocky mountain feature, the ‘sky facing features’ of each mountain are in almost all cases flattened, gradual slopes. These were clearly the original horizontal flatlands of the American/Canadian northwest that had been forced upwards as a result of pressure from below. This is quite consistent with the general ‘uplift’ consensus, and I agree.

Yet it is at this point that I have to part ways with the currently dominant scientific explanation for one reason only. Timescale.

Later I will be discussing why I believe that the Rocky Mountains (and many other mountain ranges across the globe) were created in one cataclysmic event that occurred in a matter of seconds.

Thankfully, and due to the physical appearance of our planet in the aftermath of this remarkable event my assertions can be easily supported by visual facts.

If you can imagine the forces required to create something as huge as the Rocky Mountains and (even more astonishingly) the Himalayas in their entirety within seconds then you are beginning to understand the sheer scale of what lies in the pages ahead...

 

 

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