Author: Alfred de Grazia
Year: 1983
Series: Quantavolution & Catastrophe
Series Volume: VII
| File | Type | Words | Size |
|---|---|---|---|
../lately_tortured_earth.txt | Plain text | ~187,170 | 1.1 MB |
../lately_tortured_earth.pdf | — | 1.6 MB |
Source: https://grazian-archive.com/quantavolution/QuantaHTML/plaintext/lately_tortured_earth.txt
Lately Tortured Earth is the most comprehensive Earth-sciences volume in the Quantavolution series and the longest text in the collection (~187,000 words). The title deliberately echoes "late" in the geological sense — Earth has been recently, not anciently, subjected to catastrophic forces that reshaped its surface, geology, atmosphere, and biosphere.
De Grazia surveys the geological, geophysical, and paleontological evidence for recent catastrophic change: mass extinctions, ocean floor reversals, continental disruptions, and ice age cycles that conventional science attributes to slow processes. He argues all these features are better explained by close encounters with other planetary bodies and the electromagnetic forces they unleash.
This is the most technically dense volume in the series and serves as the quantavolutionary counterpart to uniformitarian earth science textbooks. It provides the physical-science foundation that mythological volumes like Chaos and Creation and The Burning of Troy draw upon.
Cited for its treatment of Earth sciences and the physical record of catastrophic interaction with other planetary bodies
(referenced in Cook's annotated bibliography at saturniancosmology.org/books.php.html)