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| Solar System and Planets | We currently view the planets of our solar system running like this: The Sun, Mercury, Venus, the earth, Mars, the Asteroid belt and then the superior outer planets. But let's suppose they haven't always ran in this sequence.
Let's suppose they evolved in an evolutionary way. If they did, they would run like this: The Sun, Mercury, Mars, The Earth, the Asteroid belt, and the the superior planets. You might have noticed a significant change, Venus is missing from the second list, and Mars and the Earth have shifted position. Mars is now in front of the Earth. How could this be? What I said was Venus was once a Jovian moon, probably a sister moon of Io, and at some given juncture during its history its shifted position, plunged through the solar system, caught the natural gravitational field as its passed between Mars and the Earth, and force both planets to turn inside-out. but what evidence is there for this?
Well, if we look closely at the surface of Venus we see the crater construction contains an ubiquity, which in itself demonstrates the planet hasn't been there that long. If it had been there as long as other bodies in the region, then the crater construction should theoretically show a disparity. It doesn't. Also, the Greek monk Evagrious wrote in his journal of a period in the 6th century, 542ad to be precise: The Sun has turned a bluish colour and we marvel to feel its wanton might wasted into feebleness. Something fairly calamitous hit the earth during this period without any logical explanation. Crops failed, people starved, stable Dynasty's fell apart. Disease was rampant and the whole planet experienced turmoil. If as Evagrious says, the sun turned a bluish colour, one can assume some form of brimstone passed by changing atmospheric conditions. I believe Venus's heavy sulphurous atmosphere is responsible. However, the bigger question is, did it fall, or was it pushed?
It might be nice to believe that Venus transcended the solar system, passed between the Earth and Mars and dragged them inside-out purely by accident. But in all honesty, the mathematical chances of this happening are negligible.
I think we have to assume the moon (planet) Venus was given a helping hand. If we view Jupiter today you can still see the trace element of where the detonation of a huge thermonuclear explosion would have take place as a large red tempest swirling around.
If we could take a sample from this region I'm pretty certain we would find traces of cezium, the left-over deposit of a nuclear explosion to prove the theory accurate.
At this point we have to ask why an advanced Martian species would wish to pursue such an action? It goes like this: Any advanced civilisation would have worked out that the evolutionary nature of their planet would be slowly eroded.
The oxygen around them would be rapidly running out. Therefore they would face two options, one, accept the inevitability of it all and call it a day. Accept their species will perish once the atmosphere reaches a point where the sun's radiation will break through the ozone layer, or two, look for a new planet. The Martian population must have viewed our beautiful green world with very envious eyes indeed, although they'd face one huge problem: the atmospheric conditions. As their respiratory system would have honed and adapted itself to the Martian environment, planet earth's atmosphere would contain too much carbon for the to breathe. Quite simply it would poison them, therefore they would need to precipitate evolution on earth. My guess is, when Venus shifted through the solar system turned Mars and the Earth inside-out, Venus itself would have been meant to continue on to the sun, fused with it and sent a massive heat expansion throughout the solar system. This would have diluted our atmosphere and allowed a subterranean Martian population to move down here.
Mars back one page
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