The Causes and Effects (cont.)
Figure 3
Figure 3 is a plan showing a part of the solar system with the meteor swarm’s eccentric orbit. The red shaded area indicates the descending node of the swarm on a collision course with the earth. The massive impact force shows the earth shift into a brief 366 day orbit with a slight dip to the ecliptic -- Section A-A. At this point the earth enters suddenly into a colder distance from the sun.
Figure 4
The immediate impact effects of the meteoritic swarm collision occurred in a fall area that stretched from Florida up to the Canadian Shield along a trajectory path that followed approximately the 85 deg. Longitude ( See Fig. 4 ). The impacts of the meteoritic swarm created millions of craters across this long and wide area with the largest falling in the Great Lakes region. The kinetic energy of these forces at the 45 deg. Parallel caused the north and south poles to gyrate ( See Fig. 5 ). Due to this location on the globe and the involved physics of these impacts, the South Pole developed a greater gyration than the North Pole. Furthermore, the immediate shock force effects generated extremely high pressures within the earth developing massive seismic waves ( P. S. & L ). At the same time, these seismic waves were continuously influenced by the gravity pull of the sun and the moon. The combined causes virtually created a geological chaos within the earth’s structure. The following five factors describe in more detail how this event started the universal upheaval and deluge.
Figure 5
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