Planet X: (More) MASTDON Evidence
For the Discovery Channel, as transcribed by someone in the
Netherlands. MORE proof that the Mastodons, in a HEALTHY state, were
essentially flash frozen by being moved, along with their SPRINGTIME
grasslands, into the polar circle which they were not prepared to
suffer. They drown in the sloshing oceans that occur during a crust
shift, and froze, and did not thaw since, along with the grass and
wildflowers they were browsing. The Discovery Channel interview avoids
the issue of how they got frozen and did not thaw since, and how they
got moved to the polar circle. They also avoid the issue of how mud in
springtime would seal the mastodon and its fodder off from decay! And
then there's the issue of why no mud was found around the frozen
mastodon, which were encased in ice!
Discovery Channel, Mammoth-Documentary,
http://www.discovery.com/exp/mammoth/mammoth.html
Investigating the vegetation from within the frozen block
Bas van Geel, (Amsterdam laboratory):
COMMENTATOR: Preliminary findings from the tusk
tell Dann that the Jarkov Mammoth was in generally
good health, faired well in his environment, and died in
late winter or early spring. He may have died accidentally,
since at 47 years old, he was still 12 years shy of the
average Mammoth livespan. From the tests he ran at his
Amsterdam laboratory, Bas van Geel has his own ideas of
what happened.
BAS VAN GEEL: We found the flowers of Artemisia,
and some of these flowers are still CLOSED! They were
not really a flower, but were fossilized at a moment when
the pollon was still inside .... (and the flower was closed)
... which means, THAT'S NOT NORMAL!
COOMMENTATOR: The Artemisia's life cycle was
interrupted before the height of summer. Bas thinks a
mudstream may have covered the Jarkov Mammoth and
the flowers trapped in the Earth were preserved for
sighting. If, near the end of the ice-age, the temperatures
on the Tymir changed dramatically, rainfall could have
caused massive mudstreams."
[Silence/pictures of a Mammoth-carcass, slowly being
covered in mud and water]
COMMENTATOR: The muddy-flows could have
burried the Jarkov Mammoth body, sealing out oxygen
that causes decay. By the time winter's icy breath froze
the earth, the carcass was entombed, and would lay
alone and undisturbed, for over 20.000 years...
<cut to new subject>
As Velikovsky said in his book, Earth in Upheaval:
In 1797 the body of a mammoth, with flesh, skin, and
hair, was found in northeastern Siberia. The flesh had
the appearance of freshly frozen beef; it was edible, and
wolves and sled dogs fed on it without harm. The ground
must have been frozen ever since the day of their
entombment; had it not been frozen, the bodies of the
mammoths would have putrefied in a single summer, but
they remained unspoiled for some thousands of years. In
some mammoths, when discovered, even the eyeballs
were still preserved.
(All) this shows that the cold became suddenly extreme ..
and knew no relenting afterward. In the stomachs and
between the teeth of the mammoths were found plants
and grasses that do not grow now in northern Siberia ..
(but are) .. now found in southern Siberia. Microscopic
examination of the skin showed red blood corpuscles,
which was proof not only of a sudden death, but that the
death was due to suffocation either by gases or water.
And the Zetas concur:
The Mastodon is a species that went extinct during the
past few pole shifts, primarily when the grasslands they
browsed in Siberia were drawn rapidly into the new
polar circle. But where drawn into water and drown, and
then far enough north, the Mastodons were flash frozen.
If the Mastodons were not flash frozen, they would be
in some sort of state of decay - perhaps the skin
preserved, but the internal organs a mush. This is not
the case, as your recent documentaries on the frozen state
of these preserved beasts shows! So if flash frozen, and
frozen steadily since that date, then how did the
Mastodons get green grass and buttercups in their
stomachs? A fast trot to the Arctic Circle? Does anyone
presume they ate snow? These were herbivors! Their
grasslands were moved during poles shifts.
ZetaTalk, Mastodons
http://www.zetatalk.com/poleshft/p129.htm