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hooligan
Joined: 02 Feb 2002
Posts: 76
Location: Seattle |
Fri Feb 08, 2002 9:43 pm
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It is interesting to see that the Hopi prophesy the ending of the Fourth world and the beginning of the Fifth.To add to this I am posting related information. The Maya tell of the four previous ages of the sun which all ended in destruction. We are in the fifth age of the sun. The Mayan kept track of the suns cycles using complete numbers of Venus intervals.In AD 750 "the Maya disappeared. A sunspot minimum coincided with a neutral sheet shift, causing infertility, increased infant mortality and a mini-ice age, accompanied by catastrophic drought." Quote taken from The Tutankhmun Prophecies The Sacred Secret of The Maya, Egyptians, and Freemasons by Maurice Cotterell. |
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Deb
Joined: 04 Oct 2001
Posts: 163
Location: Plainfield, Indiana USA |
Sat Feb 09, 2002 12:04 am
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Dan, the weather at flying altitudes over New England for the better part of the day and evening was consistent with contrail formation, as a non- precipitation producing warm front approached.
http://cdebsjournal.topcities.com/Nov17journal.htm |
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zoobie555

Joined: 02 Jan 2003
Posts: 329
Location: Conroe, Texas, USA |
Thu Jan 02, 2003 11:23 pm
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I've witnessed the "spider webs" myself as a child in Montana, during the summers. For about 2-3 years in a row (probably mid to late 80's, maybe as late as 90-91), it would last from 1-3 days at a time each year. Eveyone in my hometown and surrounding towns witnessed it, nobody seemed phased by it, I used to lie outside on the lawn and stair up into the sky and watch it for an hour or so at a time. The strands and waded up balls of the stuff would be floating in the air as far up as one could see. Unlike the thick strands that are "silly string" like that others describe, this was much more like real spiderwebs, but never a spider in site. Maybe just a bit thicker than a normal spider web, but not much. Their would be literally thousands or tens of thousands of them visible over an hours time, I found it fascinating while everyone else seemed to just ignore it, so I never asked anyone about it. I did find this on another website about things falling from the sky, thought it may interest those who post on this board.
"Scientific American also reported another strange occurrence in late October 1881 when Milwaukee, Green Bay and other towns in that part of Wisconsin saw falls of strong, very white spider webs. They were in sizes from a few inches to strands of more than 60 feet long. The webs all seemed to float inland from above Lake Michigan in thick sheets, fading upward into the sky for as high as the eye could see. There was no mention of any spiders being seen or in the presence of the webs and where the substance could have come from was a mystery."
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