Newly
Revealed 3600-Year Old Wisdom Text Describes Extinction
of the Dinosaurs
In recent years, scientists have begun to challenge the
popular K-T extinction event theory advanced by Nobel laureate
physicist, Luis Alvarez. In 1990, he found evidence of
a large impact resulting in an Extinction Level Event (E.L.E)
in what is now Chicxulub, Mexico. His theory that this
E.L.E. wiped out the dinosaurs some 65 million years ago
was soon adopted. However, an increasing number of modern
scientists are now casting doubts on his theory. Furthermore,
a newly released 3600-year old wisdom text called The Kolbrin
Bible supports these challenges to Alvarez's theory with
a prescient human account.
At the core of this E.L.E. debate is a thin global layer
of iridium that capped the living presence of dinosaurs
on this planet. It is called the KT boundary. Iridium is
rarely found on the surface of the Earth, but it is common
to asteroids, and there is a sharply defined global layer
of Iridium that dates back to the Chicxulub impact event.
Doubts
about Alvarez's theory are founded in equally credible
explanations of the KT boundary. One notable theory is
the "KT-Deccan Traps volcanism-induced carbon cycle
perturbation extinction theory" of Dewey McLean, Professor
Emeritus of Geology in the Department of Geological Sciences,
Virginia Polytechnic Institute, Blacksburg, VA. Besides
the science, what makes McLean's theory attractive is the
amount of effort Alvarez has invested to suppress it.
While precise dating of deep time events is difficult
at best, ample evidence exists to suggest that at about
the same time Alvarez's asteroid cratered the Yucatan peninsula,
a hotspot volcano produced the Deccan Traps eruption with
equally devastating results. Unlike an explosive supervolcano
event such as the last Yellowstone eruption, the miles-thick
Deccan Traps eruption flowed out over thousands of square
miles, and released massive amounts of iridium into the
atmosphere. Sizable remnants of this lava pile still exist
on a volcanically active Reunion Island in the Indian Ocean.
Enter The Kolbrin Bible. The first part of this 11-book
secular anthology was authored by Egyptian academics after
the Jewish Exodus and is referred to as the Egyptian Texts.
The last part was authored by Celtic priests shortly after
the death of Jesus. Within the Book of Gleanings is one
passage that clearly supports the K-T Deccan Traps of Dewey
McLean:
"GLN:3:5
In olden times, there were spawned great monsters and
beasts in fearful form,
with frightful gnashing teeth and long ripping claws; an
elephant was but a rat in comparison with them. Then, because
of heavenly rebellion and turmoil, and the terror overwhelming
the hearts of men, The Great One hardened the face of the
land, which had become unstable, and the beasts were changed
to stone. This was beforetimes, when the Destroyer still
slumbered in the upper vaults of Heaven."
In recent years, scientists have begun to challenge the popular
K-T extinction event theory advanced by Nobel laureate physicist,
Luis Alvarez. In 1990, he found evidence of a large impact
resulting in an Extinction Level Event (E.L.E) in what is
now Chicxulub, Mexico. His theory that this E.L.E. wiped
out the dinosaurs some 65 million years ago was soon adopted.
However, an increasing number of modern scientists are now
casting doubts on his theory. Furthermore, a newly released
3600-year old wisdom text called The Kolbrin Bible supports
these challenges to Alvarez's theory with a prescient human
account.
At the core of this E.L.E. debate is a thin global layer
of iridium that capped the living presence of dinosaurs
on this planet. It is called the KT boundary. Iridium is
rarely found on the surface of the Earth, but it is common
to asteroids, and there is a sharply defined global layer
of Iridium that dates back to the Chicxulub impact event.
Doubts about Alvarez's theory are founded
in equally credible explanations of the KT boundary.
One notable theory is
the "KT-Deccan Traps volcanism-induced carbon cycle
perturbation extinction theory" of Dewey McLean,
Professor Emeritus of Geology in the Department of Geological
Sciences,
Virginia Polytechnic Institute, Blacksburg, VA. Besides
the science, what makes McLean's theory attractive is
the amount of effort Alvarez has invested to suppress
it.
While precise dating of deep time events is difficult
at best, ample evidence exists to suggest that at about
the same time Alvarez's asteroid cratered the Yucatan peninsula,
a hotspot volcano produced the Deccan Traps eruption with
equally devastating results. Unlike an explosive supervolcano
event such as the last Yellowstone eruption, the miles-thick
Deccan Traps eruption flowed out over thousands of square
miles, and released massive amounts of iridium into the
atmosphere. Sizable remnants of this lava pile still exist
on a volcanically active Reunion Island in the Indian Ocean.
Enter The Kolbrin Bible. The first part of this 11-book
secular anthology was authored by Egyptian academics after
the Jewish Exodus and is referred to as the Egyptian Texts.
The last part was authored by Celtic priests shortly after
the death of Jesus. Within the Book of Gleanings is one
passage that clearly supports the K-T Deccan Traps of Dewey
McLean:
"GLN:3:5 In olden times, there
were spawned great monsters and beasts in fearful form,
with frightful gnashing teeth and long ripping claws;
an elephant was but a rat in comparison with them. Then,
because
of heavenly rebellion and turmoil, and the terror overwhelming
the hearts of men, The Great One hardened the face of
the land, which had become unstable, and the beasts were
changed
to stone. This was beforetimes, when the Destroyer still
slumbered in the upper vaults of Heaven."
Article
continues below

The
reference to an object the Egyptians called the "Destroyer" is
repeated often. The Kolbrin Bible and the Egyptian academics
explain that it was a long-period orbiting object, which
during its last two flyby events caused the Great Deluge
(Noah's Flood) and the Ten Plagues of Exodus. Unlike the
Torah (Old Testament) this ancient work explains these
events as natural disasters -- not the punishments of an
angry deity.
This account in The Kolbrin Bible is part of what remains
of the Great Book as the Egyptians first called it. First
penned in ancient hieratic, the Great Book was approximately
4 times the size of the King James Bible. The impetus for
the work was the defeat the Egyptians suffered at the hands
of Moses. Convinced their own gods had been proven to be
impotent, they initiated the first regional anthropological
study in the history of humankind.
Throughout the breadth of their trading sphere, their
academics and scribes would do their business as usual,
but in their off hours began interviewing local wise men.
The aim was to record historical accounts and folklore
in the hopes of uncovering any clue that might lead the
Egyptians to the one true God of Abraham. The field notes
of these interviews were then sent back to Egypt and incorporated
into the Great Book.
One civilization that received special attention from
the Egyptians was the seafaring Phoenicians. Enamored by
the Great Book, the Phoenicians translated it to their
own 22-leter alphabet and took a copy of the work to Britain
during the late Bronze Age, which at that time was a major
exporter of tin. The Celtic priests of Britain embraced
the work, which was mostly destroyed during the 1184 arson
of the Glastonbury Abbey. What remained was combined with
other Celtic texts and translated into Old English and
collectively published as The Kolbrin Bible. After WWI,
the work was updated to Continental English and the first
copies were released in the early 1990's.
For interested researchers, this 3600-year old work offers
vital corroboration of Dewey McLean's KT-Deccan Traps eruption
theory, plus an abundant source of prescient historical
accounts of ancient global disasters. The details in these
accounts are as crisp as the man-on-the-street interviews
one sees in modern televised news broadcasts. Copies of
the work are available online and can be purchased in book
stores in the English speaking world.
by Marshall Masters
Blizzard
Interactive
Payday
loans
Back
to Emergency Cash Articles List