Well, I have to say, this is interesting information, in the extreme...... its period is 333 years. Coinkydink?? I think not. And WHAT of that comet wormwood that will poison 1/3 of the open waters? Something from a discussion board I bumped into:
Comet
Negra in 1347.
The great Comet of 1680.
Comet ISON coming in Dec. 2013.
Each is separated by 333 years. Coincidence?
"So, what was the Black Death? One intriguing possibility, according to
Professor Mike Baillie’s book, New Light on the Black Death: The Cosmic
Connection, is a comet shower."
And what about that "double dusting" we're due to receive as it
Wikipedia says the comet of 1680 was sungrazing.
Am I wrong or ISON will be sungrazing too?
I also found this in another Wikipedia page:
The Great Comet of 1680 was a
sungrazer and while used by Newton to verify Kepler's equations on orbital
motion, it was not a member of any larger groups. However, comet C/2012 S1
(ISON) has orbital elements similar to the Great Comet of 1680 and could be a
second member of the group.
passes by?
in 1014 AD a swarm of cometary debris struck the Americas
it is thought to have ended the Aztec empire
it caused a tsunami in England
|
"So, what was the Black Death? One intriguing possibility, according
to Professor Mike Baillie’s book, New Light on the Black Death: The Cosmic
Connection, is a comet shower."
And what about that "double dusting" we're due to receive as it
passes by?
best have your Immunities in order
|
Personally, I believe ISON is Comet Kirch (The Great Comet
of 1680) making a return visit.
When it passed by, it was deemed responsible (at the time) for causing the
plague, due to interstellar dust. And ISON also plans to double-dust us.
The last time Comet Kirch passed by, it's orbital period was 9,356 years.
NASA said ISON's orbit was 10,000 years.
Comet Kirch's perihelion was on November 14, 1680.
ISON's perihelion is dated November 28, 2013.
"Great Comet of 1680 —This comet has an orbit
strikingly similar to Comet ISON, begging the question of whether both objects
are one and the same or at the very least are somehow related. Discovered on
Nov. 14, 1680 by German astronomer Gottfried Kirsch, this was the first
telescopic comet discovery in history. By Dec. 4, the comet was visible at
magnitude +2 with a tail 15 degrees long. On Dec. 18 it arrived at perihelion —
its closest approach to the sun — at a distance of 744,000 miles (1.2 million
kilometers).
A report from Albany, N.Y. indicated that it could be glimpsed in daylight
passing above the sun. In late December, it reappeared in the western evening
sky, again of magnitude +2, and displaying a long tail that resembled a narrow
beam of light that stretched for at least 70 degrees. The comet faded from
naked-eye visibility by early February 1681."
This reminds me of Mary Shipton's Prophecies.
ReplyDelete