Re: New Planet!



John Scheldroup wrote:

"John Scheldroup" <jschel@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:xZ6dnW85acfRvm3fRVn-ig@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

"wws" <wwsnot@xxxxxx> wrote in message news:UM-dnZ2dnZ2LwmCLnZ2dnWKLbd-dnZ2dRVn-zZ2dnZ0@xxxxxxxxx

John Scheldroup wrote:


"wws" <wwsnot@xxxxxx> wrote in message news:2uednRjcyKeuXXLfRVn-rw@xxxxxxxxx


Kirk Gordon wrote:


<snip>


This might help.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/30/science/30planet.html

Its 560-year elliptical orbit brings it as close as 3.3 billion miles.

http://xfacts.com/x5.html

The Mesopotamian and biblical sources present strong evidence that
the orbital period of the 12th Planet is 3,600 years.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/12th_Planet

In a recently published book, titled 2012: Appointment With Marduk,
Turkish writer/researcher Burak Eldem presents a new theory,
suggesting a 3,661 years orbital period for the planet and claiming a
"return date" in the year 2012 AD.


Is there some correlation or conversion between 560 years and 3600 or 3,661 years by Maya Long Count ?

http://sipp.org/reference/tzolkin/lc3.php




John, I'm not feeling well, but here we go,
NibIru has been there all along and NASA denied it.
You know that.
The reference to Velivcovsky fits in, but he was a theorist, not a true scientist.
I'm more interested in Earth's past failed "civilizations."
The queastion is why do we keep building it up and tearing it down?
Just WHO runs this circus?
Are all earthmen warmongers?
Roger, over and out


wws
.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Tide Lock
    ... The only thing that matters is the orbital period. ... The time it takes to "despin" a planet depends on a lot of factors, ... Even more variable is the initial rotation rate, ... terrestrials the initial rotation rate can dominate the issue within ...
    (rec.arts.sf.science)
  • Re: New Planet!
    ... Its 560-year elliptical orbit brings it as close as 3.3 billion miles. ... The Mesopotamian and biblical sources present strong evidence that ... the orbital period of the 12th Planet is 3,600 years. ...
    (alt.machines.cnc)
  • Hot and cold sides of extrasolar hot Jupiter detected, no atmospheric heat transport?
    ... I first heard of this in my astronomy club meeting (from someone at ... The phase-dependent Infrared brightness of the extrasolar planet ... innermost of which has an orbital period of 4.617 days and a mass at ... star that the radiation it absorbs overwhelms its internal heat losses. ...
    (sci.astro.seti)