by Andy Lloyd

6th April 2010
from DarkStar1 Website

 

The dates of the return of Nibiru have been a controversial point for decades.

 

I have always favored the model originally put forward by Zecharia Sitchin - that the visit by Anu in 3,760 BCE was one definitive marker (it kick-started ancient calendars in the Levant region). Another very likely marker was the catastrophe that brought about the collapse of the last glacial period, thought to be about 13,000 years ago.

 

This may have been the Biblical Flood, a story that is featured in a huge number of the world's comparative mythologies, and may have come down to historical writings through oral transmission across millennia.

Ice ages come and go, and the previous Ice Epoch lasting for some 4 million years was punctuated by interglacial periods. We may, or may not, be in such a period now. It's difficult to determine whether that marker around 11,000BCE was really the end of an Ice Epoch, or just the beginning of the current warm period attributable to various planetary and astronomical cycles.

An eminent astronomer, Professor Bill Napier, thinks that there was a multiple comet strike on Earth at that time, which brought about a catastrophic period of cooling:

"The cooling, by as much as 8°C, interrupted the warming which was occurring at the end of the last ice age and caused glaciers to re-advance. Evidence has been found that this catastrophic change was associated with some extraordinary extraterrestrial event.

 

The boundary is marked by the occurrence of a "black mat" layer a few centimeters thick found at many sites throughout the United States containing high levels of soot indicative of continental-scale wildfires, as well as microscopic hexagonal diamonds (nano-diamonds) which are produced by shocks and are only found in meteorites or impact craters.

 

These findings led to the suggestion that the catastrophic changes of that time were caused by the impact of an asteroid or comet 4 km across on the Laurentide ice sheet, which at that time covered what would become Canada and the northern part of the United States.

 

The cooling lasted over a thousand years, and its onset coincides with the rapid extinction of 35 genera of North American mammals, as well as the disruption of the Palaeoindian culture."

He argues that a large comet, which had entered the planetary zone of the solar system some 20-30,000 years ago, has been breaking up ever since, and has left a debris field of rocky fragments in its wake. In this model, the debris field crossed the path of the Earth's trajectory, and the North American continent was hit by a deadly shower.

 

There are no craters to mark the event because the comets struck the glacial sheet which covered much of the continent at that time.

Could such a debris field be attributable to a more transient event - like the movement of Nibiru through the planetary solar system? It seems likely to me that any sizeable Planet X body would come with its own retinue.

 

Given that I believe a sub-brown dwarf lurks out there, moving along an elongated, elliptical trajectory, then there is scope for a whole planetary system to accompany it!

 

A swarm of comets seems a reasonable proposition as the Sun's planetary system plays host to the Dark Star's at perihelion.

 

Such an event would not occur during each transit - it would simply depend upon the positioning of the Earth in the solar system, and how that relates to the belts of Dark Star comets as they move through.

Dates? Well, if we take Sitchin's 3,600 year orbit at face value and work backwards from 3,760BCE, then we get 7,360BCE and then 10,960BCE. The rough date of Napier's catastrophe is cited as 10,890BCE.

 

There are a number of possible scenarios for the Dark Star's orbit, but this date in particular is a very good candidate for a previous return.

 

 

Reference