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John Titor's Legacy
- Debunking - I Am John Titor
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<blockquote data-quote="Grayson" data-source="post: 43902" data-attributes="member: 18"><p>Latin doesn't work linearly in the transposition of words like that. Word position is critical in may ways. It would read Object <em>of the</em> Master <em>in</em> Time... which is drivel.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>1 million years after the collision of Earth with Thea, our tidal Moon was formed and the earth was suffering tidal friction. Earth belongs to the inner group of four planets, Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars. These were formed in the inner system zone where it was too warm for volatile molecules like water and methane to condense and as such they could only be formed from compounds with high melting points like metals such as Iron, Aluminium, Nickel and silicates. These compounds are rare in the Universe and comprise about 0.6% of the original solar nebula that gave birth to our solar system. Beyond the orbit of Mars we saw the birth of planets outside the frost line and these were composed of lighter elements such as hydrogen and helium. The inner planets, the Terrestrial planets were immersed in a disc of gas and dust which had a braking effect and these planets migrated closer to the sun. The planets beyond the frost line, being made from lighter and more volatile elements migrated outwards to their current orbits. This is known science and I have seriously slashed down the events to make this point known to you:</p><p></p><p>The outer planets, Jupiter amongst them, migrated out from the sun. Their respective Moons (all defined as planetismals at that time in their respective formations) migrated out with them as they too are composed of lighter elements. They don't migrate inwards and Mars was never hit by one of Jupiter's lost Moons. Additionally, given the fact that many of the elements needed to develop life like phytoplankton were only extant in the Terrestrial planets, it would be difficult for such organisms to come into being beyond the Terrestrial planets. Earth hadn't even developed bacterial mats at that time. Life beyond the frost line may be formed from such complex molecules as Helium II but they would not give Mars any Oil deposits.</p><p></p><p>It took between three and ten million years for the Sun (after its formation) to blow all the protoplanetary disk material from the solar system and no further planetismals could have been formed subsequent to this. There was stuff in the inner system out to Mars and stuff in the outer system beyond Mars. The inner system is too dense to migrate out and the outer system is too light to migrate in. Had Jupiter lost a Moon, that too would have migrated further out. 99% of the lighter elements and molecules not in the Sun are in the outer system beyond the frost line.</p><p></p><p>So, again, we have impossibility piled upon improbability and a defiance of known science.</p><p></p><p>Do your research if you are going to spout this kind of science at me.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Grayson, post: 43902, member: 18"] Latin doesn't work linearly in the transposition of words like that. Word position is critical in may ways. It would read Object [I]of the[/I] Master [I]in[/I] Time... which is drivel. 1 million years after the collision of Earth with Thea, our tidal Moon was formed and the earth was suffering tidal friction. Earth belongs to the inner group of four planets, Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars. These were formed in the inner system zone where it was too warm for volatile molecules like water and methane to condense and as such they could only be formed from compounds with high melting points like metals such as Iron, Aluminium, Nickel and silicates. These compounds are rare in the Universe and comprise about 0.6% of the original solar nebula that gave birth to our solar system. Beyond the orbit of Mars we saw the birth of planets outside the frost line and these were composed of lighter elements such as hydrogen and helium. The inner planets, the Terrestrial planets were immersed in a disc of gas and dust which had a braking effect and these planets migrated closer to the sun. The planets beyond the frost line, being made from lighter and more volatile elements migrated outwards to their current orbits. This is known science and I have seriously slashed down the events to make this point known to you: The outer planets, Jupiter amongst them, migrated out from the sun. Their respective Moons (all defined as planetismals at that time in their respective formations) migrated out with them as they too are composed of lighter elements. They don't migrate inwards and Mars was never hit by one of Jupiter's lost Moons. Additionally, given the fact that many of the elements needed to develop life like phytoplankton were only extant in the Terrestrial planets, it would be difficult for such organisms to come into being beyond the Terrestrial planets. Earth hadn't even developed bacterial mats at that time. Life beyond the frost line may be formed from such complex molecules as Helium II but they would not give Mars any Oil deposits. It took between three and ten million years for the Sun (after its formation) to blow all the protoplanetary disk material from the solar system and no further planetismals could have been formed subsequent to this. There was stuff in the inner system out to Mars and stuff in the outer system beyond Mars. The inner system is too dense to migrate out and the outer system is too light to migrate in. Had Jupiter lost a Moon, that too would have migrated further out. 99% of the lighter elements and molecules not in the Sun are in the outer system beyond the frost line. So, again, we have impossibility piled upon improbability and a defiance of known science. Do your research if you are going to spout this kind of science at me. [/QUOTE]
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- Debunking - I Am John Titor
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