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			by Paul LaViolette 
			from
			
			Etheric Website 
			  
				
					
						
						
						Contents 
				
					
				 
				
					
	
						
					 
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			
			 
			  
			  
			
			
			Predictions Part I:
			astronomy and climatology 
			Superwave Theory Predictions and their Subsequent Verification
 Galactic Core Explosions - prevailing concept (1980): At the time of 
			this prediction, astronomers believed that the cores of galaxies, 
			including our own, become active ("explode") about every 10 to 100 
			million years and stay active for about a million years. Since our 
			own Galactic core presently appears quiescent, they believed it 
			would likely remain inactive for many tens of millions of years. 
			Although, in 1977, astronomer Jan Oort cited evidence that our 
			Galactic core has been active within the past 10,000 years.
 
 
				
					
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						Prediction No. 1 (1980 - 1983): In his Ph.D. dissertation,
						LaViolette hypothesized that galactic core explosions recur about 
			every 10,000 years and last for several hundred to a few thousand 
			years. He was the first to suggest such a short recurrence time for 
			galactic core explosions and that our own 
						
						Galactic core undergoes
						Seyfert-like explosions with similar frequency. 
						 |  
			
			Subsequent concurrence (1998): In 1988, when presented with 
			Dr. LaViolette’s Galactic explosion hypothesis, astronomer 
			Mark Morris 
			dismissed the idea as having no merit. However, in 1998 after ten 
			years of observation, Morris was quoted as saying that the center of 
			our Galaxy explodes about every 10,000 years with these events each 
			lasting 100 years or so.
 
 
 
			
			Cosmic Ray Propagation - prevailing concept (1980 - 1983): At the 
			time of this prediction, astronomers believed that interstellar 
			magnetic fields entrap cosmic rays released from Galactic core 
			outbursts and slow their outward progress so that they reach the 
			Earth after millions of years in the form of a constant low 
			intensity background radiation.
 
 
				
					
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						Prediction No. 2 (1980 - 83): 
						Dr. LaViolette’s studies concluded 
			that Galactic center cosmic ray volleys interact minimally with 
			interstellar magnetic fields and are able to propagate radially 
			outward along rectilinear trajectories traveling through the Galaxy 
			at near light speed in the form of a coherent, spherical, wave-like 
			volley. He was the first to suggest this idea of a "Galactic superwave." 
						 |  
			
			Verification (1985): Astrophysicists discovered that X-ray pulsars 
			continuously shower the Earth with high-energy cosmic ray particles 
			that have traveled over 25,000 light-years at nearly the speed of 
			light, following straight-line trajectories unaffected by 
			interstellar magnetic fields.
 
 Verification (1997): Astrophysicists detected a strong gamma ray 
			pulse arriving from a galaxy billions of light years away having a redshift of 3.4 (see 
			Prediction No. 10 below). Mainstream media, 
			such as Sky & Telescope magazine, suggested that this gamma ray 
			pulse may be accompanied by a volley of high energy cosmic ray 
			particles travelling at very close to the speed of light along a 
			rectilinear trajectory and that the gamma ray pulse is produced by 
			the radial outward movement of this volley. In effect, they were 
			restating the same Galactic superwave idea that LaViolette had 
			proposed 14 years earlier in the face of stiff resistance from 
			mainstream astronomers.
 
 Verification (2000): Radio astronomers announce at the January 2000 
			American Astronomical Society meeting that the synchrotron radio 
			emission radiated from the Galactic center (Sgr A*) is circularly 
			polarized. Scientists present at the meeting concurred with Dr. LaViolette’s suggestion that the 
			circular polarization indicated 
			that cosmic ray electrons were travelling radially away from the 
			Galactic center along straight-line trajectories.
 
 
 
			
			Cosmic Ray Bombardment - prevailing concept (1980 - 83): At the time 
			of this prediction, astronomers believed that the background cosmic 
			ray flux has remained constant for millions of years, that intense 
			cosmic ray bombardments occur very infrequently, perhaps every 30 
			million years, primarily as a result of nearby supernova explosions.
 
 
				
					
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						Prediction No. 3 (1980 - 1983):
						LaViolette concluded that a volley 
			of Galactic cosmic rays had bombarded the Earth and solar system 
			toward the end of the last ice age (ca. 14,000 years BP). Also his 
			findings suggested that other such superwaves had passed us at 
			earlier times and were responsible for triggering the initiation and 
			termination of the ice ages and mass extinctions. He was the first 
			to suggest recurrent highly-frequent cosmic ray bombardment of the 
			Earth.  |  
			
			Verification (1987): Glaciologists discovered beryllium-10 isotope
			peaks in ice age polar ice. These indicated that the cosmic ray flux 
			on the Earth became very high on several occasions during the last 
			ice age, confirming Dr. LaViolette’s theory that Galactic superwaves 
			have repeatedly passed through our solar system in geologically 
			recent times.
 
 
 
			
			Cosmic Debris Around Solar System - prevailing concept (1980 - 83): 
			At the time of this prediction, astronomers believed that the solar 
			system resided in a relatively dust free region of space.
 
 
				
					
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						Prediction No. 4 (1980 - 1983):
						LaViolette hypothesized that large 
			amounts of interstellar dust and frozen cometary debris lie outside 
			the solar system just beyond the heliopause sheath and form a 
			reservoir of material that would have supplied large amounts of 
			cosmic dust during a prehistoric superwave event. 
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			Verification (1984): The IRAS satellite team published infrared 
			observations showing that the solar system is surrounded by nearby 
			"cirrus" dust cloud wisps.
 
 Verification (1988): Astronomer H. Aumann’s observations suggested 
			that the solar system is surrounded by a dust envelope 500 times 
			denser than previously thought.
 
 Verification (1992 - 95): Telescope observations revealed the 
			presence of the Kuiper belt, a dense population of cometary bodies 
			encircling the solar system, beginning just beyond the orbit of 
			Neptune and extending outward past the heliopause sheath.
 
 Verification (1999): Observations of the influx of interstellar dust 
			particles using the Ulysses spacecraft lead Markus Landgraf and his 
			team of European Space Agency astronomers to conclude that the solar 
			system is surrounded by a ring of orbiting dust that begins just 
			outside the orbit of Saturn.
 
 
 
			
			Cosmic Dust Influx - prevailing concept (1979): At the time of this 
			prediction, astronomers believed that the rate at which cosmic dust 
			particles have been entering the solar system and the Earth’s 
			atmosphere has remained constant for millions of years. They 
			believed that the solar system lies in a relatively clean 
			interstellar space environment and hence that there is no need to 
			expect the occurrence of recent cosmic dust incursions.
 
 
				
					
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						Prediction No. 5 (Sept. 1979):
						LaViolette theorized that if a cosmic 
			ray volley (superwave) had passed by at the end of the ice age, it 
			would have pushed nearby interstellar dust into the solar system. To 
			test this, he began a plan to analyze ice age polar ice for traces 
			of cosmic dust.  |  
			
			Verification (1981 - 82): LaViolette was the first to measure the 
			extraterrestrial material content of prehistoric polar ice. Using 
			the neutron activation analysis technique, he found high levels of 
			iridium and nickel in 6 out of the 8 polar ice dust samples (35k to 
			73k yrs BP), an indication that they contain high levels of cosmic 
			dust. This showed that Galactic superwaves may have affected our 
			solar system in the recent past. In addition, he discovered gold in 
			one 50,000 year old sample, making this the first time gold had been 
			discovered in polar ice.
 
 Verification (1984): The IRAS satellite team reported observations 
			that the zodiacal dust cloud is tilted 3 degrees relative to the 
			ecliptic with ascending and descending ecliptic nodes at 87° and 
			267°, but failed to draw a conclusion from this finding. LaViolette 
			realized that the nodes are aligned with the Galactic-center-anticenter 
			direction in support of his earlier prediction that interstellar 
			dust has recently entered the solar system from the Galactic center 
			direction. 1987: He published a paper in Earth, Moon, and Planets 
			journal explaining that the orientation of the zodiacal dust cloud 
			nodes indicates that this zodiacal dust recently entered from the 
			direction of the Galactic center.
 
 Verification (April 1993): NASA’s Ulysses spacecraft team published 
			observations indicating that interstellar dust is currently entering 
			the solar system from the Galactic center direction (from the 
			direction the interstellar wind blows towards us) and hence that 
			most of the dust outside the asteroid belt is of interstellar 
			origin. Their findings were predicted by LaViolette’s 1983 and 1987 
			
			publications. One Ulysses team member had received 
			Dr. LaViolette’s 
			publications in 1985, but LaViolette’s work was not cited.
 
 Verification (1995): Cosmochemists publish observations showing that 
			Helium-3 concentrations in ocean sediments, an indicator of 
			extraterrestrial dust influx, changed by over 3 fold on a 100,000 
			year cycle between 250,000 and 450,000 years ago.
 
 Verification (1996): The AMOR radar in New Zealand detected a strong 
			flux of interstellar meteoroid particles, measuring 15 to 40 microns 
			in size, entering the solar system from the Galactic center 
			direction.
 
 Verification (2000): LaViolette demonstrates that the acid layers 
			found in 15,850 year old Antarctic polar ice vary in magnitude with 
			an eleven year solar cycle period thereby indicating an 
			extraterrestrial origin for this material. This finding is supported 
			by the discovery mentioned below (2003) that interstellar dust 
			influx varies in accordance with solar cycle phase. The finding that 
			this gas influx event heralded a series of warming trends that ended 
			the ice age, implicates cosmic dust and solar activation as the 
			causal agents responsible for terminating glacial cycles.
 
 Verification (2003): Using data obtained from the Ulysses 
			spacecraft, a group of European Space Agency astronomers led by 
			Markus Landgraf discover that the rate of interstellar dust influx 
			increased three fold from 1997 to 2000 with the approach to solar 
			maximum. They theorize a correlation between solar cycle phase and 
			interstellar dust influx rate, with the influx rate being highest at 
			the time of solar maximum. Such a correlation could explain why the 
			Sun could become locked into an active, dust accreting mode during 
			times of superwave passage.
 
 
 
			
			Tin Isotopic Anomaly - state of the art (1981): At the time of this 
			prediction, astronomers speculated that tin found in 
			extraterrestrial material could have isotope ratios different from 
			those of terrestrial tin. But up until that time no tin isotopic 
			anomalies had been reported.
 
 
				
					
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						Prediction No. 6 (1981): Having found very high concentrations of 
						tin in a 50,000 year old ice core dust sample along with gold, 
			silver, antimony, iridium, and nickel, LaViolette theorized that 
			this tin-rich dust was of interstellar origin and that the tin might 
			contain an isotopic anomaly.  |  
			
			Verification (Jan. 1984): Geochemists at Curtin University 
			(Australia) in collaboration with LaViolette used a mass 
			spectrometry technique to determine the isotopic ratios of an 
			unirradiated portion of the tin-rich dust sample. They found 
			significant isotopic anomalies in four isotopes thereby confirming
			LaViolette’s prediction that the tin dust is of extraterrestrial 
			origin. This marked the first time that tin isotopic anomalies had 
			been discovered.
 
 Indirect support (1989): Cosmochemist F. Rietmeijer published a 
			paper describing the discovery of tin oxide grains inside 
			interplanetary dust particles, with tin abundances much higher than 
			typically found in chondritic meteorites. This helps to substantiate
			LaViolette’s 1983 claim that the solar system is surrounded by dust 
			enriched in tin and that this is the source of the tin-rich dust 
			found in polar ice.
 
 
 
			
			Prehistoric Global Warming - prevailing concept (1981): At the time 
			of this prediction, climatologists believed that the Alleröd-Bölling 
			warming and Younger Dryas cold period at the end of the ice age were 
			confined primarily to Europe. They assumed that there was no global 
			warming at the end of the ice age, that the northern continental ice 
			sheets did not melt synchronously with the southern ice sheets, and 
			that the warming in the north was due to heat being drawn from the 
			Southern Hemisphere.
 
 
				
					
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						Prediction 
						No. 7 
						(1983): In his dissertation, LaViolette 
			demonstrated that the last ice age was ended by a 2000 year long 
			global warming which he calls the Terminal Pleistocene Interstadial 
			(TPI) identified with the Alleröd-Bölling interstadial in the north. 
			He also proposed that this was followed by a global return to 
			glacial conditions, identified with the Younger Dryas in the north. 
			He showed that the melting of the ice sheets was synchronous in the 
			northern and southern hemispheres and was brought about by cosmic 
			causes.  |  
			
			Verification (1987 - 96): Climatologists published temperature 
			profiles from various parts of the world showing the presence of 
			this same climatic oscillation, but did not connect their data with 
			the idea of global climatic shifts.
 
 Verification (1998): Climatologists (Steig et al.) published 
			findings in Science demonstrating the synchronous occurrence of the
			Alleröd-Bölling-Younger Dryas climatic oscillation in the Taylor 
			Dome Antarctic ice core. They claimed this as evidence that the last 
			ice age was ended by a global warming. Although they should have 
			been aware of LaViolette’s publications, their report did not cite 
			his prior work.
 
 
 
			
			Prehistoric Solar Conflagration - prevailing concept (1983): At the 
			time of LaViolette’s prediction, the general opinion was that the 
			Sun has remained in its present quiescent solar cycle state for 
			hundreds of millions of years. A small group of astronomers, 
			however, dissented with this view. For example, in 1969, 
			astrophysicist Thomas Gold published lunar rock evidence indicating 
			that, within the last 30,000 years, the radiation intensity on the 
			Moon had reached 100 suns for 10 to 100 seconds, possibly due to a 
			solar nova. In 1975, astronomer A. Lovell suggested that sun-like 
			stars occasionally produce flares of up to 10^37 ergs, 30,000 times 
			more energetic than the largest solar flare of modern times. In 
			1977, astrophysicists Wdowczyk and Wolfendale suggested that 
			the Sun 
			might produce a flare a million times larger (3 X 10^38 ergs) about 
			once every 100,000 years. Moreover in 1978, NASA astronomers
			Zook, 
			Hartung, and Storzer had published lunar rock evidence indicating 
			that 16,000 years ago solar flare background radiation intensity on 
			the Moon’s surface had peaked to 50 times the current intensity and 
			that this may have been somehow associated with the retreat of the 
			ice sheets. The idea that the Earth and Moon might have been 
			affected in the past by the arrival of a giant solar coronal mass 
			ejection had not yet been advanced.
 
 
				
					
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						Prediction No. 8 (1983): In his dissertation,
						LaViolette proposed 
			that invading cosmic dust would have caused the Sun to become more 
			luminous and engage in continual flaring activity. In
						
						chapter 4, he 
			suggested that on one occasion the Earth and Moon may have been 
			engulfed by a large prominence remnant "fireball" (coronal mass 
			ejection) thrown out by the Sun during a period of particularly 
			intense solar activity. He interpreted the findings of Zook and 
						Gold 
			as evidence that the Sun had been in a highly active T-Tauri like 
			flaring state and that at times its flaring activity had been as 
			much as 1000 times currently observed levels. He suggested that 
			these may have scorched the surface of the Earth in ice age times, 
			inducing high temperatures, rapid ice sheet melting, global 
			flooding, and mass animal extinction.  |  
			
			Concordance (1997): Satellite observations showed solar flares 
			ejecting expanding balls of plasma called "coronal mass ejections" and demonstrated that these were capable of travelling 
			outward beyond the Earth’s orbit. This lent credence to LaViolette’s 
			theory that a large coronal plasma "fireball" thrown off by an 
			immense solar flare may have reached the Earth and 
			Moon and scorched 
			their surfaces.
 
 Concordance (1999): Astronomers announced that they had observed 
			large explosive outbursts from the surfaces of nearby normal sunlike 
			stars. These "superflares" were observed to range from 100 to 10 
			million times the energy of the largest flare observed on the Sun in 
			modern times and were estimated to occur about once every hundred 
			years. This confirmed the Lovell hypothesis and increased the 
			plausibility of LaViolette’s suggestion that the Sun was producing 
			mega solar flares and intense plasma fireballs at the end of the 
			last ice age.
 
 Verification (2002): As early as the late 1970’s Dr. Han Kloosterman 
			was arguing that a global conflagration was the cause of the black 
			layer found in Alleröd sediments in southern England and in the 
			Great Lakes Region. Later in 2002, when Dr. LaViolette first became 
			aware of his work, he was on a geological field trip accumulating 
			evidence of the black Usselo Horizon dating from the Alleröd/Younger 
			Dryas transition and correlative with similar horizons found in 
			Great Britain, Belgium, France, Germany, Denmark, Poland, and the 
			southwestern U.S. Kloosterman concluded that this layer was produced 
			by a global conflagration which was also responsible for the
			extinction of the Pleistocene megafauna. Kloosterman’s thesis and 
			evidence of the Usselo horizon confirm the solar CME scenario that
			LaViolette had proposed.
 
 
 
			
			Geomagnetic Reversals - prevailing concept (1983): At the time of
			LaViolette’s prediction, geophysicists believed that geomagnetic 
			reversals and magnetic polarity flips were brought about by causes 
			internal to the Earth, that they arose from instabilities in the 
			inner rotation of the Earth’s core magnetic dynamo. They believed 
			that these field excursions took hundreds of years to occur due to 
			the inherently slow movement of the core material.
 
 
				
					
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						Prediction No. 9 (1983): In 
						
						chapter 3 of his dissertation,
						LaViolette proposed that geomagnetic reversals are induced by solar 
			cosmic ray storms. He proposed that at times when invading cosmic 
			dust causes the Sun to become very active and engage in continual 
			flaring activity, major solar outbursts could occur that are a 
			thousand times more intense than those currently observed. Further 
			he proposed that solar cosmic rays from such a mega flare could 
			impact the Earth’s magnetosphere, become trapped there to form 
			storm-time radiation belts, and generate an equatorial ring current 
			producing a magnetic field opposed to the Earth’s. If sufficiently 
			intense, this ring current magnetic field could cancel out the 
			Earth’s own field and flip the residual magnetic field pole to an 
			equatorial location. From this position it could later either 
			recover or adopt a reversed polarity. He proposed that this 
			geomagnetic excursion would be very rapid, occurring in a matter of 
			days.  |  
			
			Verification (1989 - 95): Geophysicists reported their analysis of a 
			geomagnetic reversal recorded in the Steens Mountain
			lava formation, 
			conclusively demonstrating that during this reversal the Earth’s 
			magnetic pole changed direction as fast as 8 degrees per day. This 
			overthrew the conventional geocentric view which could not account 
			for such rapid changes with internal motions of the Earth’s core 
			dynamo. It confirmed Dr. LaViolette’s mechanism of rapid change.
 
 Concordance (1995): Unaware of LaViolette’s publications, two French 
			geophysicists published a paper that sought to explain the Steens 
			Mountain polarity reversal as being due to a solar cosmic ray cause. 
			Their mechanism was the same as that which LaViolette had proposed 6 
			years before the Steens Mountain discovery. Their independent 
			arrival at the same idea is evidence of parallel idea development 
			and consensus with LaViolette’s earlier theory.
 
 
			 
 
			
			Radiocarbon Date Anomalies - prevailing concept (1983): At the time 
			of this proposal, the idea that anomalously young radiocarbon dates 
			might be produced by intense solar cosmic ray bombardments had not 
			been suggested. Such young dates were thought to be due to sample 
			contamination with younger carbon having a higher C-14 content.
 
 
				
					
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						Prediction 
						No. 10 
						(1983): Anomalously young radiocarbon dates are 
						frequently found in fossil remains of Pleistocene megafauna that 
			became extinct at the end of the last ice age. In 
						
						chapter 10 of his 
			dissertation, LaViolette proposed that a solar cosmic ray 
			conflagration caused the demise of these mammals and their 
			subsequent burial by the action of glacier meltwater waves. He 
			suggested that the neutron shower produced by the intense solar 
			cosmic ray storm (coronal mass ejection) that engulfed the Earth 
			would have radiogenically changed nitrogen atoms in animal collagen 
			into carbon-14 atoms. He proposed that this in situ radiocarbon 
			generation could have made the radiocarbon dates on exposed organic 
			matter anomalously young.  |  
			
			Verification (1998): After conducting seven years of research, 
			archeologist William Topping proposed that the abnormally young 
			radiocarbon dates of ice age Paleo-Indian sites (ca. 12,400 - 13,000 
			calendar yrs BP) could be explained if a major solar flare cosmic 
			ray particle storm had caused in situ carbon-14 production from 
			nitrogen in the organic remains of those strata. His conclusion of 
			heavy particle bombardment in Paleo-Indian times was partly 
			supported by his discovery of particle tracks and micrometeorite 
			craters in artifacts. This in situ C-14 production mechanism is the 
			same that LaViolette had earlier proposed to explain the young dates 
			for Pleistocene mammal remains dating from a similar period. Like 
			Topping, LaViolette had concluded that the demise of the large 
			mammals at that time was due to a solar flare conflagration. Since 
			Topping was probably not aware of LaViolette’s dissertation, his 
			work would constitute independent corroboration.
 
 Concordance (1995 - 1998): Researchers report the discovery that 
			there had been a sudden increase in atmospheric radiocarbon levels 
			at the Allerød/Younger Dryas transition boundary. Over a 300 year 
			period between the time of the IntraAllerod Cold Peak and the 
			beginning of the Younger Dryas, atmospheric C-14 levels rose from 3 
			to 7 % and subsequently declined during the course of the Younger Dryas.
 
 
 
			
			Glacial drift deposits - prevailing concept (1983): At the time 
			of this prediction, geologists believed that the ice sheets melted 
			gradually at the end of the ice age and that their meltwater outflow 
			was also gradual, with the exception of instances of dam breaks 
			occurring in proglacial lakes such as Lake Missoula in Montana.
 
 
				
					
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						Prediction 
						No. 11 
						(1983): LaViolette proposes that much of the 
			glacial drift deposited at the end of the last ice age was laid down 
			by glacier waves issuing from the surfaces of the ice sheets. 
						 |  
			
			Verification (1983): To explain sediment morphology in Manitoba, 
			North Dakota, and Minnesota, geologists Alan Kehew and Lee Clayton 
			propose the occurrence of catastrophic floods produced by a domino 
			effect of proglacial lake discharges. LaViolette had proposed a 
			similar domino effect mechanism for the production of glacier waves 
			on the surfaces of ice sheets.
 
 Verification (1988): German scientist Harmut Heinrich calls 
			attention to North Atlantic ocean sediment layers composed primarily 
			of rock grains of continental bedrock origin that had been 
			transported distances of up to 3000 kilometers prior to their 
			deposition. Subsequent investigations uncovered evidence that these 
			"Heinrich layers" were deposited suddenly. Heinrich 
			advances a theory that this material was transported by drifting and 
			melting ice bergs. However, not all are satisfied with this 
			explanation which fails to explain the suddenness of the deposition 
			events. In 2001, LaViolette shows that Heinrich 
			events correlate with times of climatic warming and that these 
			layers are evidence of long-range sediment transport by glacier 
			waves. He shows that Heinrich layer 0 correlates with accelerated 
			glacier wave discharge activity he proposed was occurring around 
			12,700 years BP and that Heinrich layer 1 spans the Pre-Bölling 
			Interstadial which began the deglaciation phase.
 
 Verification (1989): Canadian geologist John Shaw points out that 
			drumlins are more likely produced by forceful discharges of glacial meltwater rather than by the action of slowly advancing glaciers. He 
			proposes that the meltwater discharges had reached depths of 
			hundreds of feet and that they originated from beneath the glaciers. 
			However, more probably they were formed by glacier waves originating 
			from the ice sheet surface.
 
 
 
			
			Gamma Ray Bursts - prevailing concept (1983): During the early 
			1970’s, astronomers discovered the Earth is sporadically bombarded 
			by gamma ray bursts. At the time of this prediction, they 
			incorrectly assumed that gamma ray bursts were medium energy events 
			originating from local sources within our Galaxy. They did not 
			regard them as a significant social threat.
 
 
				
					
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						Prediction No. 12 (1983): In his dissertation,
						LaViolette proposed 
			that a superwave produced by an explosion of our Galaxy’s core could 
			be immediately preceded by a very strong gamma ray pulse, 10,000 
			times stronger than what could come from a supernova explosion. He 
			pointed out that upon impacting our upper atmosphere this burst 
			could strip electrons and induce a powerful electromagnetic pulse 
			which, like a high-altitude nuclear EMP, could have serious 
			consequences for modern society.    
						It could knock out satellites, 
			interrupt radio, TV, and telephone communication, produce electrical 
			surges on power lines causing widespread black outs, and possibly 
			trigger the inadvertent launching of missiles. He was among the few 
			to suggest that Galactic core explosions could produce 
						high 
			intensity gamma ray outbursts that could affect the Earth. 
						 
						 In 1989, under the sponsorship of the Starburst Foundation,
						LaViolette initiated an international outreach project, to warn 
			about the dangers of such astronomical phenomena. He pointed out 
			that our Galactic center could produce seriously disruptive low 
			intensity outbursts as frequently as once every 500 years and that 
			we are currently overdue for one. This was the first time a 
			widespread gamma ray pulse warning of this sort had been made.
 |  
			
			Verification (1997): In December 1997, astronomers for the first 
			time pinpointed the source of a gamma ray burst and found that it 
			originated from a galaxy lying billions of light years away. This 
			led them to conclude that these are mostly extragalactic events 
			having total energies millions of times greater than they had 
			previously supposed, thereby confirming LaViolette’s earlier 
			proposal of the existence of high intensity gamma ray bursts. If 
			this particular outburst had originated from our Galactic center, it 
			would have delivered 100,000 times the lethal dose to all exposed 
			Earth life forms.
 
 Verification (1998): Some months later, in August 27, 1998, a 5 
			minute long gamma ray pulse arrived from a Galactic source located 
			20,000 light years away in the constellation of Aquila. The event 
			was strong enough to ionize the upper atmosphere and seriously 
			disrupt satellites and spacecraft. It triggered a defensive 
			instrument shutdown on at least two spacecraft. Astronomers 
			acknowledged that this marked the first time they became aware that 
			energetic outbursts from distant astronomical sources could affect 
			the Earth’s physical environment. These events reaffirmed the 
			validity of warnings LaViolette made 9 years earlier about the 
			potential hazards of such gamma ray bursts.
 
 
 
			
			Galactic morphology - prevailing concept (1980 - 83): At the time 
			Paul LaViolette was writing in 1983, most astronomers believed that 
			quasars and blazars were very different from most other galaxies and 
			in a class of their own. LaViolette recalls a telephone conversation 
			he had, in which the renown astronomer Geoffrey Burbidge steadfastly 
			defended this view. Astronomers also believed that active giant 
			elliptical galaxies were structurally different from spiral 
			galaxies.
 
 
				
					
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						Prediction No. 13 (1980 - 1983): In his dissertation,
						LaViolette 
			proposes that quasars and blazars are the bright cores of spiral 
			galaxies in which the light from the core is so bright that it masks 
			the dimmer light coming from the galaxy’s disk. He suggests that 
			quasars and blazars are essentially the same core explosion 
			phenomenon that is seen in Seyfert galaxies and N-galaxies. He 
			predicts that when it eventually becomes operational the Hubble 
			Telescope will resolve the disks around these bright cores. He also 
			suggests that edge-on spiral galaxies with active cores would give 
			the appearance of being giant elliptical galaxies due to synchrotron 
			radiation emitted from their outward streaming cosmic rays. In 
			connection with this, he predicts that when active giant ellipticals 
			are imaged with the Hubble Telescope, spiral arm dust lanes oriented 
			edge-on will be detected.  |  
			
			Verification (1995, 1997): Astronomers publish the results of a 
			survey which imaged quasars using the Hubble Space Telescope. These 
			quasars (luminous cores) are seen to be surrounded by spiral arm 
			disks, just as LaViolette had predicted. Earlier in 1982 a group of 
			astronomers had resolved galactic light fuzz around quasar 3C273 
			using a special imaging technique. This was published after the date 
			of LaViolette’s prediction. In 1997 NASA astronomers release a photo 
			of an active giant elliptical galaxy that resolves its equatorial 
			dust lane and shows that it is oriented edge-on as LaViolette had 
			predicted.
 
 
 
			
			Archeoastronomy - prevailing concept (1979): At the time of this 
			prediction, ancient historians, cultural anthropologists and
			scholars of esoteric traditions did not suspect that ancient myth 
			makers knew the location of the Galactic center or that they had 
			associated this part of the sky with the cataclysmic cycles 
			described in legend.
 
 
				
					
						| 
						Prediction No. 14 (1979):
						LaViolette discovered that the ancient 
			star lore connected with the Sagittarius and Scorpius constellations 
			indicated the location of the Galactic center, conveyed the idea of 
			an explosive outburst, and specified a significant past date of 
			13,865 ± 150 years B.C. which also is encoded in the ancient 
			Egyptian Dendereh zodiac. Also LaViolette found that 
						myths, customs 
			and esoteric lore descendent from prehistoric times indicated that 
			cosmic rays from a Galactic core explosion catastrophically affect 
			the Earth and solar system in recurrent cycles with the most recent 
			event occurring near the end of the last ice age. He wrote up this 
			idea in an unpublished paper in 1979 and formally published these 
			ideas in 1995 and 1997 in his books
						
						Beyond the Big Bang and
						
						Earth 
			Under Fire. In Earth Under Fire he also connected 
						Mayan cosmology 
			and World Ages with the Galactic center and Galactic superwave 
			events. He began discovering these associations around 1987. 
						 |  
			
			Concordance (1994 - 1998): In a December 1994 magazine article and 
			later in his book Maya Cosmogenesis 2012 (1998), John Major Jenkins 
			presented his findings that Mayan lore contains a Galactic center 
			oriented cosmology, that specifically refers to the Galactic center 
			vicinity (ecliptic-Galactic plane crossing point) in connection with 
			the occurrence of the 
			
			Mayan World Ages. One of his findings is that 
			the Mayan calendar 2012 AD end date, which designates the end of the 
			present World Age, also indicates the time when the Earth’s precessing axis will be maximally tipped in the direction of this 
			Galactic plane intersection point. Jenkins was not aware of
			LaViolette’s work at the time he wrote, so his findings constitute 
			an instance of independent discovery and corroboration. Jenkins went 
			into much greater depth in exploring Mayan cosmological references 
			to the Galactic center, but did not explore the Galactic 
			explosion/Earth cataclysm theme discovered by LaViolette.
 
 Concordance (1999): Jay Weidner and Vincent Bridges have deciphered 
			a stone monument cipher that was erected in a French monastery at 
			Hendaye during the 17th century. They find that its message 
			attributes the biblical cataclysm to a celestial double catastrophe 
			and that its encoded astrological chart specifies the year 2002 AD 
			as the date of the next apocalyptic event. In 1997 they encountered 
			Dr. LaViolette’s work and realized that the Galactic center 
			cataclysm he was describing explained the message on the stone cross 
			at Hendaye. They have published their findings in a book entitled 
			MONUMENT TO THE END OF TIME: Alchemy, Fulcanelli and the Great 
			Cross, Vol. I The Cross at Hendaye
 
 Concordance (2000): LaViolette discovered that the largest acidity 
			spike in the entire Antarctic ice core record was produced by a 
			major solar wind mass outflow that began about 13,880 B.C. and 
			tailed off about 13,785 B.C., thereby corroborating the date encoded 
			in zodiac star lore.
 
 Go Back
 
 
 
 Predictions Part II:
			physics and astronomy
 Subquantum Kinetics Predictions
			and their Subsequent Verification
 
 
 Nucleon Core Field - prevailing concept (1978): The electric field 
			in the core of a nucleon is assumed to be aperiodic and to rise to a 
			sharp cusp at the particle’s center.
 
 
				
					
						| 
						Prediction No. 1 (1973 - 1978):
						Subquantum kinetics predicted that 
			the electric potential field in the core of a subatomic particle 
			should be Gaussian-shaped and should continue outward as a periodic 
			field pattern of diminishing amplitude having a radial wavelength 
			equal to the particle’s Compton wavelength, further that this field 
			pattern should be positively biased in positively charged particles. 
			Prediction published in: 1985 (IJGS), 1994 (Subquantum Kinetics), 
			and 1995 (Beyond the Big 
			Bang).  |  
			
			Verification (2002): Particle scattering form factor data for the 
			proton and neutron is found to be best fit by a model in which the 
			nucleon core electric charge density distribution has 
			characteristics similar to those that subquantum kinetics had 
			predicted. Energy boosting during collision, however, did cause the 
			target nucleons to exhibit a wavelength slightly shorter than had 
			been predicted.
 
 
 
			
			Gravitational Repulsion - prevailing concept (1985): Electrons are 
			assumed to produce matter-attracting fields just like protons. 
			Gravitational repulsion is considered a speculative idea.
 
 
				
					
						| 
						Prediction 
						No. 2 
						(1985): Subquantum kinetics predicted that 
						gravity 
			should have two polarities correlated with charge and that the 
			electron should produce a matter-repelling gravity field. 
			Furthermore it predicted that monopolar electric discharges should 
			produce longitudinal electric potential waves accompanied by a 
			gravity potential component. Published in: 1985 (IJGS), 1990 (ISSS), 
			and 1994 (Subquantum Kinetics). 
						 |  
			
			Verification (2001): Drs. Evgeny Podkletnov and Giovanni Modanese 
			discover that an axial high-voltage electron discharge produces a 
			matter-repelling gravity wave that travels in the direction of the 
			discharge exerting a longitudinal repulsive gravitational force on a 
			distant test mass.
 
 
 
			
			Energy Conservation and Photon Redshifting - prevailing concept 
			(1978): At the time of this prediction, physicists and astronomers 
			generally assume that photon energy is perfectly conserved and most 
			attribute the cosmological redshift to the assumed expansion of 
			space.
 
 
				
					
						| 
						Prediction No. 3 (1978): As a basic requirement of the validity of 
			its methodology, subquantum kinetics predicted that photons should 
			gradually redshift with time when passing through regions of low 
			(less negative) gravitational field potential, e.g. intergalactic 
			space. It predicted a "tired-light effect," that distant galaxies 
			should appear redshifted without the need of postulating recessional 
			motion.  |  
			
			Verification (1979 - 1986): Dr. LaViolette checks this 
			photon redshifting prediction by comparing the tired-light non-expanding 
			universe model and the expanding universe model (standard Freidman 
			cosmology) to observational data on four different cosmology tests. 
			He demonstrates that the tired-light model consistently makes a 
			closer fit to observational data on all tests. His findings, which 
			were published in the Astrophysical Journal (1986), confirm the
			subquantum kinetics tired light prediction and the notion that the 
			universe is cosmologically stationary. These findings undermine a 
			key support of the big bang theory. An update of this evidence is 
			presented in Chapter 7 of
			
			Subquantum Kinetics.
 
 
 
			
			Energy Conservation and Energy Generation - prevailing concept 
			(1978): At the time of this prediction, physicists and astronomers 
			adhered to the idea that energy is perfectly conserved. 
			Stars are 
			assumed to generate their energy either through nuclear fusion or 
			from heat released from gravitational accretion. Planets are instead 
			thought to acquire their luminosity from stored heat. There is no 
			reason to believe that planets should conform to the stellar 
			mass-luminosity relation.
 
 
				
					
						| 
						Prediction 
						No. 4 
						(1978 - 1979): As a basic requirement of the validity of 
						its methodology subquantum kinetics predicted that 
						photons should gradually blueshift when passing through regions of 
			high (more negative) gravitational field potential, e.g., within 
			stars and planets and in interplanetary and interstellar space. It 
			predicted that "genic energy" should be continuously created within 
			all celestial bodies.  |  
			
			Verification (1979 - 1992): Dr. LaViolette tested this 
			genic energy 
			prediction by plotting the mass-luminosity coordinates of the jovian 
			planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune, and Uranus) to compare them with 
			the mass-luminosity relation for red dwarf stars and found that both 
			planets and stars conformed to the same relation. Other astronomers 
			had not previously done this because doing so didn’t make sense in 
			the context of the conventional astrophysical paradigm. This 
			conformance suggests that the heat coming from the interiors of 
			planets is produced in the same way as that radiating from the 
			interiors of red dwarf stars, just as subquantum kinetics predicts. 
			He also showed that the genic energy hypothesis predicts a slope for 
			the "planetary stellar M-L relation" similar to the observed slope. 
			In addition, he showed that the upward extension of the M-L relation 
			predicts that about 16% of the Sun’s luminosity should be of genic 
			energy origin, an amount consistent with recent SNO solar neutrino 
			measurements. The required violation of energy conservation is 10 
			orders of magnitude smaller than what could be observed in 
			laboratory experiments.
 
 Verification (January 1995): Astronomers observing with the 
			Hubble 
			Space Telescope discovered that the star VB10 has a dynamic core, as 
			indicated by the presence of explosive, magnetic-field-driven flares 
			on its surface. VB10 has a mass of about 0.09 solar masses, which 
			indicates that it borders between being a red dwarf and brown dwarf. 
			Conventional theory predicts that this star should be on the border 
			of being dead and hence should not have a strong magnetic field. 
			Subquantum kinetics, which predicts that its interior should be 
			dynamic and actively evolving genic energy, anticipates these 
			results.
 
 
 
			
			Brown Dwarf Stars - prevailing concept (1985): At the time of this 
			prediction, astronomers do not expect that brown dwarf stars to have 
			any particular mass-luminosity ratio. They are assumed to be stars 
			that are not massive enough to ignite nuclear fusion and hence are 
			merely dead stars that are cooling off.
 
 
				
					
						| 
						Prediction 
						No. 5 
						(1985 - August 1995): Subquantum kinetics predicted 
			that brown dwarfs should also generate genic energy and hence, like 
			the jovian planets, should lie along the lower main-sequence 
			mass-luminosity relation for red dwarf stars. Paul LaViolette 
			published this prediction on four occasions: 1985 (LaViolette, IJGS, 
			p. 339), 1992 (LaViolette, Physics Essays) 1994 (LaViolette, 
						
						Subquantum Kinetics, p. 125), and 1995 (LaViolette, 
						
						Beyond the Big 
			Bang, p. 304).  |  
			
			Verification (November 1995, 1998): Astronomers determine the masses 
			and luminosities of two brown 
			
			dwarfs GL 229B and G 196-3B. Dr. LaViolette demonstrates that the M-L data points for these brown 
			dwarfs lies along the planetary-stellar M-L relation as he 
			predicted. This indicates that brown dwarfs are not dead stars as 
			previously supposed, but stars that are actively producing genic 
			energy in their interiors.
 
 
 
			
			Interplanetary maser signals - prevailing concept (1985): Maser 
			signals are believed to maintain constant frequencies over 
			interplanetary distances since photon energy is assumed to be 
			perfectly conserved.
 
 
				
					
						| 
						Prediction 
						No. 6 
						(1985): Dr. LaViolette determines the expected 
			magnitude of the hypothesized genic energy photon blueshifting rate 
			by modeling the intrinsic luminosities of the planets. He then 
			predicts that if a maser signal were transponded between two 
			spacecraft separated by 5 AU, the signal should be found to 
			blueshift at the rate of about 1.3 X 10^-18 per second. This 
			prediction was published on two occasions: 1985 (LaViolette, 
						
						IJGS, 
			p. 340) and 1994 (LaViolette, 
						
						Subquantum Kinetics, p. 135). 
						 |  
			
			Verification (October 1998): A group of JPL astronomers publish 
			their discovery that maser signals transponded between the Earth and 
			the Pioneer spacecraft blueshift at a rate of ~ 2.9 ± 0.4 X 10^-18 
			per second. Their value reduces to 2.3 ± 0.4 X 10^-18 per second 
			when the propulsive effects of waste heat from the spacecraft power 
			source is taken into account. Although the JPL team has chosen to 
			interpret this as a mysterious force pushing the spacecraft toward 
			the Sun, it also provides a close confirmation of the subquantum 
			kinetics prediction.
 
 
 
			
			Galactic Evolution - prevailing concept (1979): At the time of this 
			prediction, astronomers believed that galaxies form in various sizes 
			as galactic-sized gas clouds gravitationally condense to form stars. 
			They assume that the size of these galaxies does not change over 
			time except through galaxy mergers. Galaxies in the immediate 
			neighborhood of the Milky Way are assumed to have the same size 
			ratio as young galaxies at cosmological distances.
 
 
				
					
						| 
						Prediction 
						No. 7 
						(1979 - 1994): Subquantum kinetics predicts that 
						matter is continuously created throughout the universe, with the 
			matter creation rate being highest in the vicinity of already 
			existing matter. Furthermore it predicts that galaxies should 
			progressively grow in size with the passage of time since they are 
			formed by matter being created primarily in their central nucleus 
			and being propelled outward by galactic core explosions. Dr. LaViolette published this prediction on two occasions, in 1985 (LaViolette, 
						
						IJGS, p. 335) and in 1994 (LaViolette, 
						
						Subquantum Kinetics, p. 118). 
			Also see LaViolette, 
						
						Beyond the Big 
			Bang, p. 94.  |  
			
			Verification (July 1995): Observations with the 
			Hubble Space 
			Telescope show that younger, more distant galaxy clusters are 
			dominated by fainter, more compact galaxies and have much fewer of 
			the larger spiral galaxies, as compared with nearby older galaxy 
			clusters.
 
 
 
			
			Galactic Core Energy Source - prevailing concept (1985): At the time 
			of this prediction, the nuclei of active galaxies and quasars are 
			known to contain central masses ranging from millions to billions of 
			solar masses, and astronomers assume that these core masses exist in 
			a collapsed state as black holes. They further assume that the 
			prodigious energy output from these cores is powered from matter 
			being swallowed by these hypothesized black holes. No other means of 
			generating energy is known to explain the immense amount of energy 
			observed to come from these locations.
 
 
				
					
						| 
						Prediction 
						No. 8 
						(1985): Subquantum kinetics predicts that 
			matter-accreting black holes do not exist. Instead, it predicts the 
			existence of highly massive, very dense celestial bodies of finite 
			size called "mother stars" which continuously and spontaneously 
			produce matter and genic energy in their interiors. LaViolette 
			published his ideas on this on two occasions: 1985 (LaViolette, 
						
						IJGS, 
			p. 342) and 1994 (LaViolette, 
						
						Subquantum Kinetics, pp. 143-144). 
						 |  
			
			Verification (January 1995): A group of astronomers led by John Bahcall, observing with the 
			Hubble Space Telescope, discover that 11 
			out of 15 quasars are devoid of any surrounding material and hence 
			have no matter available to power a black hole hypothetically 
			located at their centers. This supports the subquantum kinetics 
			prediction that such energetic sources are instead powered by 
			energy 
			spontaneously created in their interiors.
 
 Verification (September 1997): 
			Hubble Space Telescope observations 
			of the heart of active galaxy NGC 6251 provide further confirmation 
			of the earlier January 1995 verification. These observations show 
			that this galaxy’s core is swept clear and hence that there should 
			be no matter available to be accreted by a hypothetical central 
			black hole.
 
 
 
			
			Supernova Precursor Stars - prevailing concept (1985): At the time 
			of this prediction, astronomers believe that supernova are produced 
			by red giant stars which have exhausted their supply of nuclear 
			fuel. They presume that the once the red giant’s nuclear reactions 
			subside, it collapses and subsequently rebounds in a supernova 
			explosion.
 
 
				
					
						| 
						Prediction 
						No. 9 
						(1985): Subquantum kinetics predicts that 
			supernovae are produced, not by red giant stars, but by blue supergiant stars, that is, by stars that are exceedingly luminous 
			and hence energetically unstable. It predicts that, rather than 
			collapsing, the star undergoes a nonlinear increase in its 
			production of genic energy which leads to a stellar explosion. 
			LaViolette published this prediction in 1985 (LaViolette, 
						
						IJGS, pp. 
			342-343).  |  
			
			Verification (1987): Supernova 1987A explodes in the 
			Large Magellenic Cloud. This is the closest supernova observed in the 
			history of modern astronomy. Astronomers locate its precursor star 
			on old photographic plates and determine for the first time what 
			sort of star produced this explosion. Surprisingly, they find that 
			it had been a blue supergiant star, just as subquantum kinetics had 
			predicted.
 
 
 
			
			Galactic Core Energy Source - prevailing concept (1985): At the time 
			of this prediction, astronomers had not imaged stars in the vicinity 
			of the Galactic center since the observational techniques had not 
			yet been developed. Based on their conventional theories, they 
			expected that most stars in the vicinity of the Galactic center 
			should be low mass stars, which they theorized should be very old 
			stars, at least as old the the Galaxy, e.g., billions of years.
 
 
				
					
						| 
						Prediction 
						No. 10 
						(1985): Subquantum kinetics predicts that massive 
			stars residing in the vicinity of the Galactic center
						should instead 
			be massive. It proposes the theory that matter is continuously 
			created, that stars grow in size and grow most rapidly in the 
			vicinity of the Galactic center where the gravity potential and 
			matter creation rate is highest. Furthermore subquantum kinetics 
			predicts that massive stars, such as blue supergiants
						are among the 
			oldest stars and are not young stars as conventional theory 
			predicts. LaViolette published this prediction in 1985 (LaViolette, 
						
						IJGS, pp. 341-342) and again in 1994 (LaViolette, 
						
						Subquantum Kinetics, pp. 157 - 158). Also see pp. 234 and 242 (last paragraph) 
			of the second edition of Subquantum Kinetics which describes the 
			expectation that older, more massive stars should reside near a 
			galaxy’s core.  |  
			
			Verification (1995): A group of astronomers (Krabbe et al.) publish 
			observations of the Galactic center stellar cluster which indicate 
			that the region within 1-1/2 light-years of the Galactic center is 
			populated with about two dozen luminous helium-rich blue supergiants 
			having masses of up to 100 solar masses. This finding confirms the 
			subquantum kinetics prediction. Unaware of the subquantum kinetics 
			prediction, they have difficulty in accounting for this finding. 
			They speculate that these are young stars which must have formed 
			between 3 and 7 million years ago from gas residing in this region. 
			But they are unable to explain how this would occur since the large 
			tidal shear in this region should have disrupted such a star 
			formation process.
 
 Verification (2003): UCLA astronomer Andrea Ghez reports on 
			observations she has made of the Galactic center using 
			infrared 
			speckle interferometry and adaptive optics. She was able to plot the 
			trajectories of these stars. Based on these observations, she 
			confirms that the stars in the immediate vicinity of the Galactic 
			center, within 0.01 light years, are very massive, but that they 
			have spectra typical of "young" stars (young by the conventional 
			definition). She finds this puzzling since the tidal forces in the 
			vicinity of the Galactic center would be much too strong to allow 
			stars to form through a gravitational accretion process, this being 
			especially true of the eight stars found closest to the Galactic 
			center. She suggests that these massive stars may in fact be old 
			stars whose proximity to the Galactic center has altered their 
			appearance to make them masquerade as young stars. However, she is 
			unable to offer any mechanism by which this could happen. Here we 
			find her coming close to the subquantum kinetics prediction that 
			these stars near the Galactic center should be very massive. 
			However, by following conventional theory, she must resort to 
			proposing mysterious stellar masquerading effects since conventional 
			theory erroneously interprets massive stars to be young stars, 
			instead of old stars. But with subquantum kinetics these massive 
			stars appear exactly as they should, namely as blue supergiants 
			which in this paradigm are very old stars.
 
 
			
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