Survival Praxis #42 – World in Peril, Revisited

The study of paleomagnetism during the twentieth century has yielded irrefutable evidence that many different areas of the earth’s surface have occupied polar positions during the history of the planet.

World in Peril: The Origin, Mission & Scientific Findings of the 46th/72nd Reconnaissance Squadron by Ken White (1994), p. 188 Library of Congress 93-61798

Ben Davidson’s book, The Next End of the World, he relies heavily on the scientific team’s report of Major Maynard White’s arctic expedition after the Second World War. He was sent to map the north polar region for military briefing in the late 1940s. It was classified by the Pentagon but was summarized and published by Major White’s son in 1994 after his father’s death in the now famous book among catastrophists: The World in Peril.

Essentially, the report was the foundation for the belief in the crustal displacement theory. Arctic sediment layers were examined which revealed at least five cycles (or four and a half) between tropical and arctic flora and fauna fossilization. In other words, the arctic region has experienced alternately epochs of tropical and then frigid climates. While there might be different explanations as to how this has happened, the evidence remains undisputed.

World in Peril can be found on-line at https://archive.org/details/worldinperiltheorigin/mode/2up

Go to approximately page 182 for the relevant material. The rest of the book is about human interest stories pertaining to the members of the crew that were a part of the expedition.

It is copyright protected. That is why I have not uploaded it to this website.

There is much opposition to the crustal displacement theory but little offered as an alternative by the scientific community. Still, the idea that the crust of the Earth can slide or roll in the matter of minutes or hours seems unbelievable, but if it did, it would explain things like the frozen mammoth.

Douglas Vogt does not believe in the crustal displacement theory; he has an alternative view: that before the last nova, the Earth’s orbit was much closer to the Sun and provided warmer temperatures, even in the polar regions. Obviously, the equatorial region would have been too hot for habitation. We surmise that these creatures were living in a tropical Siberia and that the last nova blew away enough of the atmosphere that it immediately experienced the conditions of space. That could have produced the flash freeze.

But five times?

That is the question you must answer: how the Earth could tilt 90 degrees or experience a crustal slide still does not seem possible. But how else can the fossil record be explained?

Go to https://2046ad.org/survival-praxis-8-the-ice/ for a more complete report.

JWS, 8/27/23

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