Polar Axis Alignment

Polar Axis Alignment determines the position of the North and the South Pole.

Every 40,000 years the axis on which the Earth spins re-aligns in a different position.

There is currently a belief that the North Pole has been situated in 4 different positions in the last 100,000 years:

  • Prior to 90,000 BC it was positioned in the Yukon, Alaska.
  • Between 50,000 and 90,000 BC off the coast of Northern Norway.
  • Between 10,000 and 50,000 BC in Hudson Bay, North America.
  • Since 10,000 BC in the middle of the Arctic Ocean, at what we call the North Pole today.

A Polar Axis Re-alignment moves both the North and the South Pole into a more temperate climate.

The result is a melting of some of the ice caps, which are then re-formed at the site of the new pole at either end of the Earth’s axis.

As the magnetic field of the Earth is created by the Earth’s spin and is tangential to the Earth’s Axis, a Polar Axis Re-alignment results in a change in the Earth’s magnetic field.

That is unless a change in the Earth’s magnetic field creates a polar axis re-alignment.

As the Earth’s magnetic field is relative to the Earth’s electrical and gravitational fields, which is beyond current scientific understanding, polar axis re-alignment is not yet seen as being scientifically credible.

The Theory of Polar Axis Alignment will supercede the Theory of Earth Crust Displacement.

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