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Post by Dave on May 8, 2012 10:47:58 GMT -5
The jigsaw fitting together across the Atlantic rift seem obvious, but the expanse of the Pacific Gap is so large itis hard to imagine the continental plates also fitting together across the pacific. Modern imagery is an excellent tool to make obvious: The Continental plates fit together perfectly to form a Planetoid 65%smaller than Earth's current diameter. Why is the Pacific gap so large when compared to the Atlantic? Actually, FD-WEDT suggest that out world underwent a fluidic phase of global expansion. this same fluidic modeling of the semi-solid mantel behavior yields perfect modality for the Pacific Gap. Several factors would have been at play. The Earth is a spinning mass in space - therefore - the continental plates woukld have all moved to their rotational balance location. Combined with the sizes of the pacific rim of fire, the Hawaiian Sea Mount volcanic hot spot - that perhaps the Pacific rift was the first to violently expand. The centrifugal forces of planetary rotation and harmonics would have swung the North American plate Eastward as the Pacific grew. Not until rotational forces demanded that the Atlantic rift also open to stabilize the rotational harmonics of the planet. Attachments:
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