Saturn the God of Seeds
Saturn was called the god of seeds or of
sowing, (1) also the lord of
the fieldfruits. (2)
A Deluge destroying much faunal life must have caused
a dissemination of plants: in many places new forms of vegetation must
have sprouted from the rich soil fertilized by lava and mud; seeds were
carried from all parts of the globe and in many instances, because of
the change in climate, they were able to grow in new surroundings. The
axis of the earth was displaced, the orbit changed, the speed of rotation
altered, the conditions of irrigation became different, the composition
of the atmosphere was not the sameentirely new conditions of growth
prevailed.
Ovid thus describes the exuberant growth of vegetation
following the Flood. After the old moisture remaining from the Flood
had grown warm from the rays of the sun, the slime of the wet marshes
swelled with heat, and the fertile seeds of life, nourished in that life-giving
soil, as in a mothers womb, grew, and in time took on some special
form. When, therefore, the earth, covered with mud from the
recent Flood, became heated up by the hot and genial rays of the sun,
she brought forth innumerable forms of life, in part of ancient shapes,
and in part creatures new and strange. (3)
The innumerable new forms of life in the animal and
plant kingdoms following the Deluge could have been solely a result of
multiple mutations.(4)
Although this seems a sufficient explanation of why and how Saturn came
to be credited with the work of dissemination and mutation, the mention
of another possibility should not be omitted.
If it is true that the Earth passed through the gases
exploded from Saturn, it should not be entirely excluded that germs were
carried together with meteorites and gases and thus reached the Earth.
The scholarly world in recent years has occupied itself
with the idea that microorganismsliving cells or sporescan
reach the Earth from interstellar spaces, carried along by the pressure
of light rays.(5) The
explosion of a planet is a more likely method of carrying seeds and spores
through interplanetary spaces.
The new forms of life could be the result of mutations,
a subject I have discussed in Earth in Upheaval. But the possibility
that seeds were carried away from an exploding planet cannot be dismissed
either.
References
-
Augustine, De
Civitate Dei VII. 13f. [Augustine wrote:
Saturnus . . . unus de principibus deus, penes quem sationum
omnium dominatus est. Cf. Arnobius 4.9; Macrobius, Saturnalia
I. 7. 25; Servius, On Vergils Georgics I. 21; Saturn
was credited with the introduction of agriculture in Italy (Macrobius,
Saturnalia VII. 21). In Greece Kronos was closely associated
with the harvest of grain (H. W. Parke, The Festivals of the Athenians
(London, 1977), p. 29. Among the Egyptians it was said that Osiris
is seed. (Firmicus Maternus, The Error of the Pagan Religions,
II. 6; cf. A. Erman, Die Religion der Aegypter (Berlin, 1934),
p. 40; Gressman, Tod und Auferstehung des Osiris, p. 8ff.
In Babylonia during the festival marking the drowning of Tammuz, grains
and plants were thrown upon the waves. (Langdon, Tammuz and Ishtar,
p. 13.]
- Lydus, De Mensibus IV. 10.
-
Ovid, Metamorphoses,
lines 418ff., transl. by F. J. Miller. Cf. Empedocles, fg. 60,
61, edited by J. Brun (Paris, 1966); cf. also Plato, The Statesman,
65.
-
[The
effects of nearby supernovae on the biosphere have been the object
of intensive study be geologists in recent years, in the attempt to
account for abrupt changes in the history of life on this planet.
Cf. D. Russel and W. Tucker, Supernovae and the Extinction of
the Dinosaurs, Nature 229 (Feb. 19, 1971), pp. 553-554.
Sudden extinctions were followed by the appearance of new species,
quite different from those preceding them in the stratigraphic record.
In a relatively brief interval whole genera were annihilated, giving
way to new creatures of radically different aspect, having little
in common with the forms they replaced. See N. D. Newell, Revolutions
in the History of Life, Geological Society of America Special
Papers 89, pp. 68-91; Cf. S. J. Gould and N. Eldredge, Punctuated
equilibria: the tempo and mode of evolution reconsidered, Paleobiology
1977, Vol. III, pp. 115-151. Thus over the past two or three decades
many geologists and paleontologists have found themselves increasingly
drawn to the view that the observed abrupt changes in the biosphere,
such as that which marked the end of the Mesozoic and is thought to
have brought with it the extinction of the dinosaurs, among other
animal groups, could best be explained by the exposure of the then
living organisms to massive doses of radiation coming from a nearby
supernova. The radiation would annihilate many species, especially
those whose representatives, whether because of their large size or
for other reasons, were unable to shield themselves from the powerful
rays; at the same time new organisms would be created through mutations
or macro-evolution. See Velikovskys comments in
The Pitfalls of Radiocarbon Dating, Pensée IV
(1973), p. 13: . . . in the catastrophe of the Deluge, which
I ascribe to Saturn exploding as a nova, the cosmic rays must have
been very abundant to cause massive mutations among all species of
life. . . . Animals would suffer much more severely than plantson
plants the principle effect would be mutagenic. See K. D. Terry and
W. H. Tucker, Biologic Effects of Supernovae, Science
159 (1968), pp. 421-423.].
-
E.g, F. Hoyle
and Ch. Wickramasinghe, Does Epidemic Disease Come from Outer
Space? New Scientist, 17th November, 1977, pp. 402-404.
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