Is The Earth Partially Hollow and Do People live Within?

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One of those theories brandished about over the years that has always intrigued me. If there is light, water and vegetation beneath our feet, no reason we could not live there. Away from the effects of erratic surface weather and conditions. Is it not normal to live inside a planet? Of course, that's where all the UFO's come from too.

  • Is the earth partially hollow and do people live within?

    O, for sure.

    An' sometimes they crawl outta their tunnels an' hold Quaker meetings in my apartment cos I seen 'em, shufflin' about in their dungarees.

    They gather up a few chairs, some sit cross legged, an' then they jus hang around for a while, touchin' on the spirit.

    One time, I had sumthin' creep into my bedroom an' start riflin' through my smalls drawer, but then sumthin' else peeped round the door an' whispered, "c'mon, we gotta go — there is no chocolate here," so I figured they are prolly not sinister beings.

    They do not know I am on to them, an' it is my treat to leave small morsels of chocolate about the place — seemingly abandoned crumbs upon which they occasionally brave a covert nibble.

    I would love to give them all names but it is so hard to distinguish between them in the dark — apart from Leggo Boy, who has a weird limp.

    Leggo Boy is my favorite; he is extra meticulous about replacin' my furniture jus' as he found it.
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    • Profile picture of the author sconer
      Originally Posted by Princess Balestra View Post

      Is the earth partially hollow and do people live within?

      O, for sure.

      An' sometimes they crawl outta their tunnels an' hold Quaker meetings in my apartment cos I seen 'em, shufflin' about in their dungarees.

      They gather up a few chairs, some sit cross legged, an' then they jus hang around for a while, touchin' on the spirit.

      One time, I had sumthin' creep into my bedroom an' start riflin' through my smalls drawer, but then sumthin' else peeped round the door an' whispered, "c'mon, we gotta go -- there is no chocolate here," so I figured they are prolly not sinister beings.

      They do not know I am on to them, an' it is my treat to leave small morsels of chocolate about the place -- seemingly abandoned crumbs upon which they occasionally brave a covert nibble.

      I would love to give them all names but it is so hard to distinguish between them in the dark -- apart from Leggo Boy, who has a weird limp.

      Leggo Boy is my favorite; he is extra meticulous about replacin' my furniture jus' as he found it.
      Your new avatar reminds me of Liam McPoyle.

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      • Profile picture of the author BigFrank
        Banned
        People will believe anything. It's one of the major failings of the human race.

        Cheers. - Frank
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        • Profile picture of the author discrat
          Originally Posted by BigFrank View Post

          People will believe anything. It's one of the major failings of the human race.

          Cheers. - Frank
          You mean like this ? ( Noah took T-Rex on his Arc.)
          https://answers.yahoo.com/question/i...8135551AAfz7KE

          "Dinosaurs were created on day 6 along with all the other land animals, including Adam and Eve.
          Noah took representatives of all kinds of land animals on the Ark.

          Those that think the dinosaurs died out millions of years ago are perhaps unaware of the large amount of evidence indicating that they lived recently alongside man."
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          • Profile picture of the author BigFrank
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            Originally Posted by discrat View Post

            You mean like this ?
            Yes, precisely like that. lol

            Cheers. - Frank
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            • Profile picture of the author Claude Whitacre
              When I read "Theories" like this, I try to understand how someone could substantiate such an idea as a hollow Earth.

              To me, the most obvious contribution is being completely oblivious to our knowledge of geology, how mass effects gravity, plate tectonics, how gravity builds planets....

              You would have to be oblivious to the fact that volcanoes exist, and what they are, and how they are formed.

              But I think it's more than that. Some "ideas" are so opposing physical laws, and have so little to support them except a whim.....that they, to me at least, indicate damage to the cerebral cortex.

              If someone proposed a hollow Earth in the year 1500, it wouldn't be so ridiculous, because we had very little knowledge of how the Earth works, and its properties.

              But this isn't then.

              The Earth rotates at a tad over 1,000 miles an hour. It isn't enough to press "inner Earth villagers" to the sides of the inner Earth, any more than it's powerful enough to throw us all, who live on its surface, into space. Water tends to rise to the surface on Earth, because it's lighter than the magma (liquid rock) that makes up our mantle, and the solid iron core than makes up the center of the world. It has nothing to do with centrifugal force.


              If the centrifugal force of the Earths spin were enough to create "inner wall gravity", the planet never would have formed at all. Planets form from the inside out, not the outside in.


              Knowing that there are people..who are allowed to breed and vote...that take these ideas seriously, makes the certainly of my eventual death, and eternal nothingness, more palatable. And for that I thank you.
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              • Profile picture of the author yukon
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                Originally Posted by Claude Whitacre View Post

                When I read "Theories" like this, I try to understand how someone could substantiate such an idea as a hollow Earth.

                To me, the most obvious contribution is being completely oblivious to our knowledge of geology, how mass effects gravity, plate tectonics, how gravity builds planets....

                You would have to be oblivious to the fact that volcanoes exist, and what they are, and how they are formed.

                But I think it's more than that. Some "ideas" are so opposing physical laws, and have so little to support them except a whim.....that they, to me at least, indicate damage to the cerebral cortex.

                If someone proposed a hollow Earth in the year 1500, it wouldn't be so ridiculous, because we had very little knowledge of how the Earth works, and its properties.

                But this isn't then.

                The Earth rotates at a tad over 1,000 miles an hour. It isn't enough to press "inner Earth villagers" to the sides of the inner Earth, any more than it's powerful enough to throw us all, who live on its surface, into space. Water tends to rise to the surface on Earth, because it's lighter than the magma (liquid rock) that makes up our mantle, and the solid iron core than makes up the center of the world. It has nothing to do with centrifugal force.


                If the centrifugal force of the Earths spin were enough to create "inner wall gravity", the planet never would have formed at all. Planets form from the inside out, not the outside in.


                Knowing that there are people..who are allowed to breed and vote...that take these ideas seriously, makes the certainly of my eventual death, and eternal nothingness, more palatable. And for that I thank you.







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              • Profile picture of the author lanfear63
                Originally Posted by Claude Whitacre View Post

                When I read "Theories" like this, I try to understand how someone could substantiate such an idea as a hollow Earth.

                To me, the most obvious contribution is being completely oblivious to our knowledge of geology, how mass effects gravity, plate tectonics, how gravity builds planets....

                You would have to be oblivious to the fact that volcanoes exist, and what they are, and how they are formed.

                But I think it's more than that. Some "ideas" are so opposing physical laws, and have so little to support them except a whim.....that they, to me at least, indicate damage to the cerebral cortex.

                If someone proposed a hollow Earth in the year 1500, it wouldn't be so ridiculous, because we had very little knowledge of how the Earth works, and its properties.

                But this isn't then.

                The Earth rotates at a tad over 1,000 miles an hour. It isn't enough to press "inner Earth villagers" to the sides of the inner Earth, any more than it's powerful enough to throw us all, who live on its surface, into space. Water tends to rise to the surface on Earth, because it's lighter than the magma (liquid rock) that makes up our mantle, and the solid iron core than makes up the center of the world. It has nothing to do with centrifugal force.


                If the centrifugal force of the Earths spin were enough to create "inner wall gravity", the planet never would have formed at all. Planets form from the inside out, not the outside in.


                Knowing that there are people..who are allowed to breed and vote...that take these ideas seriously, makes the certainly of my eventual death, and eternal nothingness, more palatable. And for that I thank you.
                As I suspected, Arnie Sakusen has come on this thread to debunk it. The arms of NASA have stretched out and silenced your reportage on your famous journey to the center of the earth.

                Well as always, I must challenge your argument (for the fun of it)

                1) Recent reporting in the mainstream news has put forward some scientific theories that there are vast bodies of water underneath the Earths surface, AKA, enough to say that there would be seas. Perhaps as much as on the surface.

                2) Lava and magma tends to exist in pockets and form tubes to the surface to blow off steam.It comes from deep down, It may not be everywhere, near the surface.

                3) What you are reporting about what lies beneath our feet is at best, our best guess. We have not penetrated that far down. We are definitely making good assumptions of what lies at the core though, that causing a magnetic field, iron core, and and the magma that spews up is around it. (central heating). What lies in between is open to conjecture. There may be layers, and pockets where these seas could exist. There is still plenty of gravity underneath to hold everything in place.

                If you have water,you may have land masses and vegetation. You may have some life. This would not be that far down though to be doable due to increased pressure, heat and as to where light comes from, I don't know.

                People know about what goes on, on the surface of the Earth and can speak authoritatively about it. To some extent, what goes on in space. The bottom of the seas and the makeup of the immediate structure of the Earth beneath our feet remains largely unexplored.

                If you think about it, it makes perfect sense to live inside a planet (if possible), just as we lived in caves and now homes. It protects us from the ravages of weather and cosmic rays. Perhaps that's where all the smart people went. (the evidence is clear on that one)
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                • Profile picture of the author Claude Whitacre
                  Originally Posted by lanfear63 View Post

                  As I suspected, Arnie Sakusen has come on this thread to debunk it. The arms of NASA have stretched out and silenced your reportage on your famous journey to the center of the earth.

                  Well as always, I must challenge your argument (for the fun of it)

                  1) Recent reporting in the mainstream news has put forward some scientific theories that there are vast bodies of water underneath the Earths surface, AKA, enough to say that there would be seas. Perhaps as much as on the surface.

                  2) Lava and magma tends to exist in pockets and form tubes to the surface to blow off steam.It comes from deep down, It may not be everywhere, near the surface.
                  Yes, there is plenty of water "deep down". But the Earth is 7,917.5 miles in diameter.

                  If the water is 100 miles down, that is indeed deep down. But it isn't 3,000 miles down.

                  The entire planet is a liquid ball, with a thin crust. The entire surface is floating on a sea of molten rock. It's what allows continents to shift. It's what creates mountain ranges.

                  We know how much the Earth weighs. Honest. It's impossible that it's hollow.

                  You know, a quick read of a Wikipedia page on the Earth, or any science book ...or any encyclopedia....would explain this stuff in very clear terms, that would make perfect sense.
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                  • Profile picture of the author Dan Riffle
                    Originally Posted by Claude Whitacre View Post

                    You know, a quick read of a Wikipedia page on the Earth, or any science book ...or any encyclopedia....would explain this stuff in very clear terms, that would make perfect sense.
                    Sure, but have you tested it yourself? How do you know if you haven't tested yourself? You're just a believer and a regurgitator.
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                    • Profile picture of the author Claude Whitacre
                      Originally Posted by Dan Riffle View Post

                      Sure, but have you tested it yourself? How do you know if you haven't tested yourself? You're just a believer and regurgitater.
                      I feel like regurgitating now.
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                      • I do not believe the Earth is hollow but I figure there have to be hollows somewhere in the structure.

                        Hollows an' fissures are natural as plates an' oceans, an' the only mystery is what kinda space they occupy in termsa volume.

                        World is fulla weird stuff, an' I am sure we will uncover hollows.

                        Gonna be nuthin' much there -- no weirdo mushrooms or beetles -- but hollows there will be.

                        For Claude's sake, I jus' hope there is no race of f*ck ugly wimmin down there.

                        Then I saw her face
                        *boop boop boop boop boop*
                        now I'm a regurgitator...
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                  • Profile picture of the author lanfear63
                    Originally Posted by Claude Whitacre View Post

                    Yes, there is plenty of water "deep down". But the Earth is 7,917.5 miles in diameter.

                    If the water is 100 miles down, that is indeed deep down. But it isn't 3,000 miles down.

                    The entire planet is a liquid ball, with a thin crust. The entire surface is floating on a sea of molten rock. It's what allows continents to shift. It's what creates mountain ranges.

                    We know how much the Earth weighs. Honest. It's impossible that it's hollow.

                    You know, a quick read of a Wikipedia page on the Earth, or any science book ...or any encyclopedia....would explain this stuff in very clear terms, that would make perfect sense.
                    I never said that the Earth was totally hollow (note the word partially in the subject line). Just that there may be pockets of immense cavernous spaces that could hold a body of water, land and vegetation. It is pure speculation on my part and of course there is anecdotal evidence, and stories, like the alleged, confiscated film footage from Admiral Byrd and the green children etc. Yada Yada.

                    Equally, the science books you advocate are still working on theories of what they think is going on beneath our feet. Supported by some good scientific evidence and informed speculation based on that. I say speculation though because we have not burrowed down and know conclusively that it is so, and uniform across the globe.

                    Your argument is still like coming out in complete acceptance of Einstein's famous theory before the bending of light around the sun observation proved it conclusively.

                    You bad scientist.

                    Added. I propose we start digging in the basement of the Sweeper Store on Tuesday. (after the bank holiday) We must know for sure.
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                    • Profile picture of the author Claude Whitacre
                      Originally Posted by lanfear63 View Post

                      I never said that the Earth was totally hollow (note the word partially in the subject line). Just that there may be pockets of immense cavernous spaces that could hold a body of water, land and vegetation.


                      My Dear Friend;

                      It's entirely possible that there is life below the surface. It's conceivable that it could even be miles down, although the crust gets hotter the deeper you go.

                      But not 1,000 miles down. Not even 100 miles down. It's not just hotter than boiling water. It's hotter than fire....from a blowtorch. It is, after all melted rock.

                      The crust is at most, 30 miles thick, and that's including the tallest mountain ranges.

                      Below that, is liquid rock....melted....radioactive....rock.

                      A few miles down? Who knows.
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                      • Profile picture of the author lanfear63
                        Originally Posted by Claude Whitacre View Post

                        My Dear Friend;

                        It's entirely possible that there is life below the surface. It's conceivable that it could even be miles down, although the crust gets hotter the deeper you go.

                        But not 1,000 miles down. Not even 100 miles down. It's not just hotter than boiling water. It's hotter than fire....from a blowtorch. It is, after all melted rock.

                        The crust is at most, 30 miles thick, and that's including the tallest mountain ranges.

                        Below that, is liquid rock....melted....radioactive....rock.

                        A few miles down? Who knows.
                        To be fair, if you would indulge in taking Admiral Byrd's story at face value, or even the green children's. Both suggest that entering or exiting the subterranean space did not take that long, so not that far down, more like going into some huge, continent sized caverns underneath or sandwiched into our thick surface bedrock, accessed by caves or flying down into a dip and under a ravine/shelf like Byrd claims to have done.

                        Byrd took his story on lecture tour together with his footage which has since gone missing. (including footage of mammoths apparently, good place for survival) In the case of the green tinted skinned children, it would be possible that living in a twilight subterranean world with limited light that it could tinge your skin. Note, it was lost after exposure to sunlight.

                        I don't see humans or humanoids originating in these places though as I see sunlight/natural light as one of the prerequisite's for life to start. Rather, some stumbled on these places and stayed and their bodies adapted.

                        It's an interesting theory and slightly more plausible than a lot of the stuff out there. If there is anything to it then I suspect they will all come to the surface soon to tell us to stop polluting their air.
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                        • Profile picture of the author seasoned
                          Originally Posted by lanfear63 View Post

                          To be fair, if you would indulge in taking Admiral Byrd's story at face value, or even the green children's. Both suggest that entering or exiting the subterranean space did not take that long, so not that far down, more like going into some huge, continent sized caverns underneath or sandwiched into our thick surface bedrock, accessed by caves or flying down into a dip and under a ravine/shelf like Byrd claims to have done.
                          Well, in THIS part of byrd's story, he talks about being "summoned" in some capacity, and the creatures taking him a reasonable distance. So YEAH the distance could have been great. The green kids? Who knows if they are part of that at all.

                          Byrd took his story on lecture tour together with his footage which has since gone missing. (including footage of mammoths apparently, good place for survival) In the case of the green tinted skinned children, it would be possible that living in a twilight subterranean world with limited light that it could tinge your skin. Note, it was lost after exposure to sunlight.
                          he tinge could ALSO be due to medicines, or diet. It may EVEN have been due to an ailment. You COULD have blue skin, from blood, or some silver excess, and yellow from skin color, or a metabolic problem.

                          I don't see humans or humanoids originating in these places though as I see sunlight/natural light as one of the prerequisite's for life to start. Rather, some stumbled on these places and stayed and their bodies adapted.
                          Who knows? Evolution as it is requires some complicated bootstrapping process, that tries to answer the complexity question through an incredibly long time span and some kind of fair competition. Nobody really knows even exactly how it could have happened, let alone how it did.

                          It's an interesting theory and slightly more plausible than a lot of the stuff out there. If there is anything to it then I suspect they will all come to the surface soon to tell us to stop polluting their air.
                          Yeah, it is kind of touchy. For example, if I were them, and as advanced as these people supposedly were, I might be tempted to thwart the collection of raw material for nuclear tests, and frustrate any trials, and try to play on the UFO mythos to try to stop things. Then again, by that time people were desperate, and such tricks HAVE been tried, and what if you had a failure? If I had inside info, I would try to stop any attempt to start WWI, but how would they get such info? And then there was that stupid "treaty". MORONIC! But how would they stop THAT? They would never listen to reason. So yeah, I guess it was DOOMED to happen! Apparently Germany, Japan, and the US were ALL close!

                          So I guess the best thing to do is protect your world, and hope for the best.

                          Steve
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                  • Profile picture of the author Kurt
                    Originally Posted by Claude Whitacre View Post

                    Yes, there is plenty of water "deep down". But the Earth is 7,917.5 miles in diameter.

                    If the water is 100 miles down, that is indeed deep down. But it isn't 3,000 miles down.

                    The entire planet is a liquid ball, with a thin crust. The entire surface is floating on a sea of molten rock. It's what allows continents to shift. It's what creates mountain ranges.

                    We know how much the Earth weighs. Honest. It's impossible that it's hollow.

                    You know, a quick read of a Wikipedia page on the Earth, or any science book ...or any encyclopedia....would explain this stuff in very clear terms, that would make perfect sense.
                    It would be better to use the radius instead of diameter to determine how far something is "deep down".
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                    • Profile picture of the author Claude Whitacre
                      Originally Posted by Kurt View Post

                      It would be better to use the radius instead of diameter to determine how far something is "deep down".

                      It would be better if you had never been born.


                      Not radius
                      Not diameter.....

                      But...Circumference Doom!
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                      • Profile picture of the author Dan Riffle
                        Originally Posted by Claude Whitacre View Post

                        It would be better if you had never been born.


                        Not radius
                        Not diameter.....

                        But...Circumference Doom!
                        You mean Circumference of Doom?
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                • Profile picture of the author sconer
                  It's perfectly reasonable to believe that there are many large pockets inside of the Earth that could house life. I don't believe that there is life, but I don't see it as being an insane idea like whatshisface said.
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      • Hey, I was on a cyber girl eyeball roll earlier in the week, but when Alan Rickman died, I flipped into Potter mode.

        So this is kinda Mad-eye Moody.

        I am gonna go bore a hole in this thread now, see if I can re-emerge somewhere later, deeper down where creatures lurk and the bright lights of the shoppin' mall are unknown...
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  • Profile picture of the author yukon
    Banned
    The entrance to the center of the earth is in the basement of a vacuum cleaner store in Wooster, Ohio.

    Use coupon code: BLACKCAT
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    • Profile picture of the author Midnight Oil
      I'm pretty sure the distinguished German professor Otto Lidenbrock put this to rest in the 1860's.
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  • Profile picture of the author butters
    Didn't all this forum come from there or is it just me??
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  • Profile picture of the author sbucciarel
    Banned
    Is The Earth Partially Hollow and Do People live Within?


    Yes
    ............
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  • Profile picture of the author Jason Kanigan
    Dammit I'm working on a kids' story with this premise and now someone's going to think it was because of the WF. No. It was not.

    Haven't seen that map before.



    You would think entrances would be all over the place though, not just in a few locations.

    Remember, as goofy as it all sounds, "The heresy of one age becomes the orthodoxy of the next."

    As I often say, "One of us is in for a big surprise."

    This is the more complete wikipedia article.
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    • Profile picture of the author seasoned
      Originally Posted by Jason Kanigan View Post

      Dammit I'm working on a kids' story with this premise and now someone's going to think it was because of the WF. No. It was not.

      Haven't seen that map before.



      You would think entrances would be all over the place though, not just in a few locations.

      Remember, as goofy as it all sounds, "The heresy of one age becomes the orthodoxy of the next."

      As I often say, "One of us is in for a big surprise."

      This is the more complete wikipedia article.
      I've been hearing a LOT of crazy theories about such things. I guess I should expect it, as this whole world has gone NUTS! I watched a Swedish person yesterday attack a danish person as practically EVIL because they aren't doing EVERYTHING they can, and are telling people considering asylum that the free buffet is greatly reduced now. She ALSO said that swedish people are dying out and NEED to get VERY VERY VERY foreign people to replace them, so they will do all they can. This is akin to not having enough sugar, and replacing it with arsenic when you don't have enough. The KICKER? Denmark used to be #1! But why doesn't sweden simply tell a muslim country that they can take over? The refugees can have ALL the land they want, and on THEIR terms. So what if the swedish heritage, language, and history is wiped out and all their citizens suffer? I AM saying that tongue in cheek, but it isn't really any different from what she seems to want. BTW the US AND denmark, and germany, and switzerland, and other countries have often allowed decent people in if they try to learn the language and fit in with the culture.

      But YEAH, I have heard theories about the flat earth, concave earth, and hollow earth. I don't think I ever saw one illustrated as you put it. They HAVE talked about the "underworld", and hell as part of this world, etc.... But when I have heard that it always sounded like another dimension. That is yet ANOTHER part that has SO many different theories. HECK, there is back to the future when they speak of the "grandfather paradox" and THEN, when it didn't suit them anymore, they speak of the "multiverse theory". OK, which is it? Did marty disappear because his parents never got together, or was he simply in another multiverse to exist as he had, but travel a different time line?

      Yeah, there was a time that I only took demonstrable and obviously logical things as gospel but, obviously, that can only go so far, and it requires knowing some history and SOME history is PERVERTED and DISTORTED! Some, for example, have stated that the current level of technology REQUIRES alien intervention. If you know the history behind it, it becomes obvious how it came to be WITHOUT alien intervention.

      Take the book of enoch theories. I will dispense with a lot of the garbage, but say that at least one couple is saying that all whites come from fallen angels. They say that many KNOW this and that their speaking of "their little angel" is PROOF. YEAH they also speak of a "little princess" or a "little monkey". SOME have taken to pet names like "pumpkin"! MAN what people want to believe!

      Steve
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  • Profile picture of the author KobaltDS
    Many ears ago people thought, that our planet based on 3 turtuels lol)
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    • Profile picture of the author Jill Carpenter
      If the ice melts at the north and south pole from global warming, will all that water flood out those people inside the earth?
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      • Profile picture of the author yukon
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        Originally Posted by Jill Carpenter View Post

        If the ice melts at the north and south pole from global warming, will all that water flood out those people inside the earth?


        No, the earth is spinning like a washing machine on spin cycle.
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      • Profile picture of the author lanfear63
        Originally Posted by Jill Carpenter View Post

        If the ice melts at the north and south pole from global warming, will all that water flood out those people inside the earth?
        A possibility, and that's why they sent their representative, Al Gore, to influence us. If their is no action to curb global warming in ten more years, the giant sink plugs will be put in place.

        Added: Yukon is right, the Earth spins at 1,000 miles per hour, it would send the water outwards, away from these alleged holes.
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  • Profile picture of the author sconer
    You are so smart, Claude.
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    • Profile picture of the author Kay King
      6 Awesome Caves to Call Home BECKHAM CREEK CAVE LODGE

      I love that cave house - but don't think I care to go any deeper underground.
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    • Profile picture of the author Claude Whitacre
      [DELETED]
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      • Profile picture of the author sconer
        Originally Posted by Claude Whitacre View Post

        I'm not smart. I'm sane.
        No no no, you're definitely a fart smeller, I mean smart feller.
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  • Profile picture of the author sconer
    I got circumferenced at birth. Damn genital mutilation.
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  • Profile picture of the author yukon
    Banned
    I've been inside Mammoth Cave in Kentucky, I don't remember seeing a Central Sun. Maybe they were confused by the bright light bulbs?










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  • Profile picture of the author bizgrower
    Surprised nobody brought up Admiral Byrd:

    http://www.ourhollowearth.com/Bernard/Chapter1.htm
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    "If you think you're the smartest person in the room, then you're probably in the wrong room."

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    • Profile picture of the author lanfear63
      Originally Posted by bizgrower View Post

      Surprised nobody brought up Admiral Byrd:

      The Hollow Earth
      Oh but I did.
      Signature

      Feel The Power Of The Mark Side

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      • Profile picture of the author bizgrower
        Originally Posted by lanfear63 View Post

        Oh but I did.
        Bronco fever.
        Signature

        "If you think you're the smartest person in the room, then you're probably in the wrong room."

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  • Profile picture of the author HeySal
    Um. So you mean that Jules Verne didn't put an end to this question? That wasn't a documentary I saw? I thought Journey to the Center of the Earth was a documentary.

    He's right about finding the possibility of huge water reservoirs. I didn't get an image of boats and beach balls when I read the report.

    Also Stan Grist has written about the catacombs of tunnels that run underneath South America. Some of the entrances are still guarded. Not sure exactly how deep or where they go - or whatever, but I know there's a very large catacomb system. That they exist isn't folk lore - but about anything we know about them is because those outside of the tribes that guard them who go in to explore have a habit of not coming back out again. As you might figure - that is probably a factor in how few have any interest in going into them, lol. Fitz was thinking of taking his team down there once and decided against it.

    Not swayed by the video. He was pretty interesting to listen to, though.

    I would have to check my history - but didn't some of those scientists live in a time that they considered the earth flat and to have opposed that idea would have meant death as a heretic? Back when Descartes wrote his book on idealism, he put out his theory then backtracked all over hell in back to appease the queen and keep his head attached, so the book is a little disorienting to what he was actually trying to convey at points. Maybe I'm thinking the scientists this guy talked about lived later than I thought they did?

    And "interior sun". We pretty much know the center is hot - and heat quite often does make light if there's enough of it and it's hot enough, so wouldn't the ancient thought of "sun" in the center actually translate to our modern idea of a hot core without necessitating fields, trees, etc to go with it?

    Fun video and had some interesting points. I give it a thumbs up but not expecting to see anyone crawling out of holes because they got lost while out exploring any time real soon.
    Signature

    Sal
    When the Roads and Paths end, learn to guide yourself through the wilderness
    Beyond the Path

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