The
Sumerian
Descriptions
of
our
solar
system.

We
know today that beyond the giant planets Jupiter and Saturn lie more major
planets, Uranus and Neptune, and a small planet, Pluto. But such knowledge
is quiet recent. Uranus was discovered, through the use of improved telescopes,
in 1781. Neptune was pinpointed by astronomers (guided by mathmatical calculations)
in 1846. It became evident that Neptune was being subjected to unknown
gravitational pull, and in 1930 Pluto (was located).
TIME
LINE
OF
RESEARCH
REGARDING
THE
"SEARCH
FOR
PLANET
X"
-
In 1841,
John Couch Adams began investigating the by then quite large residuals
in the motion of Uranus. In 1845, Urbain Le Verrier started to investigate
them, too. Adams presented two different solutions to the problem, assuming
that the deviations were caused by the gravitation from an unknown planet.
-
Sept 30,
1846 --- one week after the discovery of Neptune, Le Verrier declared that
there may be still another unknown planet out there. On October 10, Neptune's
large moon Triton was discovered, which yielded an easy way to accurately
determine the mass of Neptune, which turned out to be 2% larger than expected
from the perturbations upon Uranus.
-
Another
attempt to find a trans-Neptunian planet was done in 1877 by David Todd.
He used a "graphical method", and despite the inconclusivenesses of the
residuals of Uranus, he derived elements for a trans-Neptunian planet:
mean distance 52 a.u., period 375 years, magnitude fainter than 13.
-
In
1879, Camille Flammarion added another hint as to the existence of a planet
beyond Neptune: the aphelia of periodic comets tend to cluster around the
orbits of major planets. Jupiter has the greatest share of such comets,
and Saturn, Uranus and Neptune also have a few each.
-
Percival
Lowell, most well known as a proponent for canals on Mars, built a private
observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. Lowell called his hypothetical planet
Planet X, and performed several searches for it, without success. Lowell's
first search for Planet X came to an end in 1909, but in 1913 he started
a second search, with a new prediction of Planet X: epoch 1850-01-01, mean
long 11.67 deg, perih. long 186, eccentricity 0.228, mean dist 47.5 a.u.
long arc node 110.99 deg, inclination 7.30 deg, mass 1/21000 solar masses.
Lowell and others searched in vain for this Planet X in 1913-1915. In 1915,
Lowell published his theoretical results of Planet X. It is ironical that
this very same year, 1915, two faint images of Pluto was recorded at Lowell
observatory, although they were never recognized as such until after the
discovery of Pluto (1930).
-
Recent
calculations by the United States Naval Observatory have confirmed the
orbital perturbation exhibited by Uranus and Neptune, which Dr. Thomas
C Van Flandern, an astronomer at the observatory, says could be explained
by "a single undiscovered planet". He and a colleague, Dr. Richard Harrington,
calculate that the 10th planet should be two to five times more massive
than Earth and have a highly elliptical orbit that takes it some 5 billion
miles beyond that of Pluto
New
York Times
June
19, 1982
Something
out there beyond the farthest reaches of the known solar system seems to
be tugging at Uranus and Neptune. Some gravitational force keeps perturbing
the two giant planets, causing irregularities in their orbits. The force
suggests a presence far away and unseen, a large object that may be the
long- sought Planet X. The last time a serious search of the skies was
made it led to the discovery in 1930 of Pluto, the ninth planet. But the
story begins more than a century before that, after the discovery of Uranus
in 1781 by the English astronomer and musician William Herschel. Until
then, the planetary system seemed to end with Saturn.Today, scientists
accept theories concerning plate tectonics. There are articles and studies
showing that, at one time, all of Earth continents were on one side of
the planet. What the stories don't explore is the question, if all the
continents were on one side, what was on the other? The other side has
been described as a tremendous gap, matching the Sumerian story of how
the Earth came about. The Sumerians said Earth was really half a planet
called Tiamat, which broke up in a collision with Nibiru, [or Planet X].
The
discovery of new planets has, in the last two hundred years, owed more
to the science of mathematics than it has to the design of bigger and better
telescopes. The unaccounted-for mathematical irregularities in the orbits
of the outer planets have prompted astronomers to speculate upon the existence
of a further, undiscovered planet. Astronomers are so certain of this planet's
existence that they have already named it 'Planet
X' - the Tenth Planet.
In
1982, NASA themselves officially recognised the possibility of Planet X,
with an announcement that 'some kind of mystery object is really there
- far beyond the outermost planets'. One year later, the newly launched
IRAS (Infrared Astronomical Satellite) spotted a large mysterious object
in the depths of space. The Washington Post summarised an interview with
the chief IRAS scientist from JPL, California, as follows:
"A
heavenly body possibly as large as the giant planet Jupiter and possibly
so close to Earth that it would be part of this solar system has been found
in the direction of the constellation Orion by an orbiting telescope...
'All I can tell you is that we don't know what it is', said Gerry Neugebauer,
chief IRAS scientist.
The
6,000 year old Sumerian descriptions of our solar system include one more
planet they called "Nibiru", which means "Planet of the crossing".The descriptions
of this planet by the Sumerians match precisely the specifications of "Planet
X" (the Tenth Planet), which is currently being sought by astronomers in
the depths of our own Solar System. Why has Planet X not been seen in recent
times? Views from modern and ancient astronomy, which both suggest a highly
elliptical, comet-like orbit, takes Planet X into the depths of space,
well beyond the orbit of Pluto. We discovered Pluto with our telescopes
just recently in 1930. Is it not possible that there are other forces at
work on our solar system besides the nine planets we know of? YES!!!!
The Sumerian descriptions of Our Solar System are being confirmed with
modern advances in science. This article will show actual diagrams from
the Sumerian times and how the accuracy for describing the planets is overwhelming!
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