Quote Originally Posted by nickbaer View Post
The Earth is a wobbly rock, that does not spin on its axis or orbit around the Sun in perfect precision. Thus, about every 120,000 years, we have glacial ice ages, followed by warm periods.
Have you read bout the shifting of the magnetic poles?

It's really fascinating.
Graham Hancock is a writer/explorer who has spent decades investigating ancient sites around the world and came to a conclusion about a catastrophic period.
There are legends weaved into every religion which seem to match on every continent, with mythical beings arriving to help the people and teach them to survive. Then a catastrophic event happens.

That resulted in several civilizations being swallowed by the sea.

He developed the idea that there was a shift of the earth's mantle, with whole continents moving. And that this would accompany a shift in the magnetic poles as the Earth changed.
Strangely, there is scientific evidence to show that the Earth has hundreds, if not thousands, of places showing a previous magnetic event. Modern science attributes this to a shift of the magnetic poles around the Earth over centuries, but others combine this with the idea of a mantle shift and suggest that the same "magnetic fingerprint" would be found if the mantle had slid over the locations of the magnetic poles.

It's fascinating stuff, but science does show that the magnetic poles are moving, and the consequences of that are pretty much unknown. It's fair to assume that many species would be affected by this in migratory habits, and general behavior if it happens too quickly for evolution to keep up.

I think I'll have to read up on this Zodiac change a little to see how that relates to the whole theory, if it does at all.

It's all fascinating stuff!