The Flat Earth Society
Flat Earth Discussion Boards => Flat Earth Theory => Topic started by: timterroo on November 04, 2018, 10:25:02 PM
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I could not find anything in the wiki about this, so I'm curious; how does FET explain the existence of meteorites and the event of meteor showers?
From my observation, a meteor, as it enters our atmosphere/plane explodes with tremendous force and burns up into nothing.
What is going on with the dome as this happens? Do meteorites come from above the dome and poke holes in it just before they plunge into earth, or do they somehow form underneith the dome and plummit downwards suddenly for some unknown reason?
Is there another explanation?
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I could not find anything in the wiki about this, so I'm curious; how does FET explain the existence of meteorites and the event of meteor showers?
From my observation, a meteor, as it enters our atmosphere/plane explodes with tremendous force and burns up into nothing.
What is going on with the dome as this happens? Do meteorites come from above the dome and poke holes in it just before they plunge into earth, or do they somehow form underneith the dome and plummit downwards suddenly for some unknown reason?
Is there another explanation?
So far I've seen\read, mostly the latter, from underneath the dome:
What is seen streaking across the skies:
- Bolts of electricity, kind of like lightning, but different
- Military munitions/experiments
- 'Fireworks' dropped form planes
- Pieces of the dome itself
Craters caused by:
- Bolts of electricity, kind of like lightning, but not
- Underground gaseous explosions creating sink holes
- Pieces of the dome itself
Meteorites:
- Fake, like how moon rocks are fake
- Pieces of the dome itself
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I could not find anything in the wiki about this, so I'm curious; how does FET explain the existence of meteorites and the event of meteor showers?
From my observation, a meteor, as it enters our atmosphere/plane explodes with tremendous force and burns up into nothing.
What is going on with the dome as this happens? Do meteorites come from above the dome and poke holes in it just before they plunge into earth, or do they somehow form underneith the dome and plummit downwards suddenly for some unknown reason?
Is there another explanation?
Another explanation is that many of the flat earth models don't have a dome.
I don't know how the flat earth models that include a firmament along with the dome would explain this.
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I could not find anything in the wiki about this, so I'm curious; how does FET explain the existence of meteorites and the event of meteor showers?
From my observation, a meteor, as it enters our atmosphere/plane explodes with tremendous force and burns up into nothing.
What is going on with the dome as this happens? Do meteorites come from above the dome and poke holes in it just before they plunge into earth, or do they somehow form underneith the dome and plummit downwards suddenly for some unknown reason?
Is there another explanation?
Another explanation is that many of the flat earth models don't have a dome.
I don't know how the flat earth models that include a firmament along with the dome would explain this.
From what I've seen outside this forum, the dome model seems to be pretty common.
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When I was a lot younger I actually saw a meteorite, or maybe a piece of the dome, fly across the sky and hit the earth very close to where I was standing. The meteorite hit the ground close enough to me that I actually saw it hit and bounce back up into the air a short distance. We all ran over and saw what looked like a large, red hot, rock about 12 inches in diameter. If it was a part of the dome it didn't look very transparent to me at the time. But again, that was a long time ago and my memory could have become 'clouded' as well.
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When I was a lot younger I actually saw a meteorite, or maybe a piece of the dome, fly across the sky and hit the earth very close to where I was standing. The meteorite hit the ground close enough to me that I actually saw it hit and bounce back up into the air a short distance. We all ran over and saw what looked like a large, red hot, rock about 12 inches in diameter. If it was a part of the dome it didn't look very transparent to me at the time. But again, that was a long time ago and my memory could have become 'clouded' as well.
I bet you would have liked to know that meteorites are worth around $5 a gram. Since iron is about 7.2 grams per cm2 that would have been worth a lot of money. 14,000ish cm2