The Almighty

CHAPTER 6

TOPOGRAPHY

Although it is positive that the surface of the Earth first began to cool and solidify at the north and south poles, which made possible the earliest growth of plants and animals in those localities, still it is improbable that the first pattern of man was produced there.

In the beginning the Earth was but a swirling mass of heated densities trying to reach a central suction point.

As this swirling mass was drawn toward the center it rounded itself into circular form and then developed a shell as a protection against external influences.

As the hot gases from the center of the earth worked their way toward the colder outside regions they gradually solidified into a porous shell. A balance was eventually struck between the greater openings at the start and the final small pores that were necessary to permit entrance of outside gases and evacuation of inside gases.

As a preventive against interior gases exploding the earth these pores were maintained through the shell so that all superfluous matter could be conveniently eliminated.

From a mixture of the gases which ooze through these pores and the elements from air, moisture and sun rays the menorgs create plants and animals.

Vegetation was the first organic life to be introduced upon Earth by the menorgs and their original design was a single blade of grass.

But long periods of time passed between the production of the first blade of grass and the creation of the first animal.

The most primitive animals on record are known as Protozoa’s and there are now more than eight thousand species of them in existence. They are extremely small having but a single cell.

Some of these tiny creatures have never developed beyond their first structural stage. But some of them have been developed with minute mental and muscular systems.

From time to time, as nature needed them, the menorgs produced such primitive animals as worms, insects, fish, snakes and birds in ever increasing numbers and complexity.

Millions of different species of animals were produced upon Earth, to meet the ever increasing numbers of variegated plants.

Extended periods passed from the time when the first crude animal was brought to life and the time when the first crude man made his appearance.

During such periods the crust of the Earth gradually cooled and solidified throughout its entire circumference and the north and south ends of it became so cold that animals found it advantageous to move to the temperate and tropical regions.

The equatorial zone around the Earth, being nearest to the Sun, was the last to cool sufficiently to permit the final solidification of the entire shell.

For that reason the covering of the Earth bulged outward and developed a greater circumference at the Equator than at any other part of it.

As the surface of the Earth solidified, parts of it were pushed outward as bumps by excessive internal heat and other parts were shrunk into wrinkles and basins by excessive exterior cold.

The elements of moisture are arranged into different densities according to temperature, thus heat changes water into vapor and cold changes water into ice.

Therefore, as the heat from the interior of the Earth produces vapor that is drawn away from its surface by cold it is liquified at the higher altitudes and then drawn back to the surface again as water.

This water then fills up the wrinkles and basins which makes rivers, lakes and oceans.

Water or other substances are changed from one density to another by a change in temperature.

By the addition of heat, water is expanded and changed into steam. Or by the addition of cold, water is contracted and changed into ice.

As the north and south poles are farthest away from the direct peltings of the Sun’s rays, those points of the Earth’s surface are affected mostly by ice.

Although water is contracted by cold its volume is also increased by it.

Cold draws the heat from water, retains it, and then by the addition of both substances, heat and cold, water is increased in bulk as ice, and therefore requires more space than the water occupied.

That should prove conclusively that heat and cold are both tangible substances as I have, for many years, been trying to teach the wise men of the Earth.

Chemists have a formula for water known as H20, meaning that in the water molecule two atoms of hydrogen are bound up with one atom of oxygen. This combination gives to water a greater density than that of air, heat, cold, light, electricity or sound, because of its closer mass formation.

On the other hand water is of lesser density than stone or iron because it is not so closely massed as they are.

The moisture for mixture with the gases oozing from the pores of the Earth’s crust which is needed for the production of plant life upon dry land is carried there by currents of air.

The Heat combining with air near the crust of the Earth expands it, and by lessening its density causes it to rise to higher altitudes and thereby forces the heavier colder air from above into the lower levels.

The shifting of these air currents is what causes the changeability of weather conditions.

As the warmer air rises from the surface of the Earth it carries along with it moisture from the water of a river or lake or ocean, which upon reaching a colder altitude, shrinks into water again and falls back upon the crust of the Earth, which may be dry land many miles away.

The moving air currents also carry along with them particles of dust which contain the microscopic seed of the various plants that spread their growth to all parts of the Earth.

Air is a substance that completely surrounds the Earth and extends many miles in all directions away from its shell.

The Air contains such elements as oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen, water vapor, carbon dioxide, argon, ammonia, ozone and other ingredients in small quantities. The lowest stratum of Air is saturated with particles of dust.

The pull of Suction at the center of the Earth causes the heavier particles of Air to lay close to its crust and the further away it extends the thinner it becomes until it adjoins the Ether in which the Earth is immersed.

Specialists in aerology have mapped out different strata of the atmospheric regions and given to them technical names. The Troposphere and the Stratosphere have already been penetrated by man’s Airplanes and Balloons.

Notwithstanding that the Air is very thin where it adjoins the Ether, nevertheless, it contains sufficient substance to cause friction as soon as the cosmic debris is drawn into it by the power of the Earth’s Suction.

The Heat caused by such friction dissolves solid chunks of matter into a gaseous state, so that it can pass through the pores of the crust of the Earth and be used within for building and operating purposes.

The atmosphere therefore is used as a digestive organ in preparing this extraneous substance for assimilation prior to its entrance through the mouth of the Earth, which is located at its North End.

Heat at a certain temperature releases Light from solid matter. So as the cosmic debris causes friction with the Air which dissolves it into gaseous form, a bright glow results, somewhat similar to the manner that light is shown in the sky over a Steel Mill after Solid Metal has been dissolved with sufficient heat to release it.

That is the way those so-called mysterious Northern Lights (Aurora Borealis) happen. Famous Scientists have spun many fanciful theories about those Lights, and it is about time for them to eliminate their guessing contests and talk sensibly.

Air is a substance that man cannot live without. He was designed and built as a machine to be operated with and within the Air. The most important element of the Air that man depends upon for existence is Oxygen.

The chemists’ formula, known as 02, states that a molecule of oxygen gas consists of two atoms. They standardize the weight of one oxygen atom as 16 and the weight of a molecule of oxygen gas as 32 in comparing molecular weights of gaseous substances.

Man breathes Air and if it was not for the external Pressure of Air the internal Pressure of gases would explode him. The temperature of the Air keeps man from freezing or roasting.

Man balances himself by internal suction that offsets the Earth’s suction and by internal pressure that offsets the external pressure of the atmosphere.

Each and every species of animalism, including man, was designed and built by menorgs under the direction of the Creator for a specific purpose.

From the original pattern man multiplied and spread over the face of the Earth as the original blade of grass multiplied and spread over the face of the Earth.

Therefore all races of mankind came from the same original stock and none can claim the superiority of precedence.

Advance to Chapter 7.
Return to Contents.
Return to Home Page.


Please mail to: WebMaster@Lawsonomy.org should you have questions or concerns about this site.