So how do you know that there is an edge or ice wall? You seem to waiver on basic characteristic of your bi-polar model. Would you please take the time to write down your model, its characteristics, and experimental data that demonstrates your model superior to Rowbotham's. Thanks.
It's not "my" model. It was proposed by this society in the early 1900's. You can find it in "The Sea-Earth Globe and and its Monstrous Hypothetical Motions" by Albert Smith.
Okay, then. So Rowbotham says you're wrong. The SP is circumferential (p. 289), not a single point as in your model.
I know what he says. I also know what has been discovered since then.
Wrong. The Sun is visible at both poles on the equinoxes all day.See: http://www.komonews.com/weather/blogs/scott/88604352.html
Actually, that article describes the prediction of the sun's position as an unpredictable "guessing game":
"These atmospheric effects make figuring the actual time the sun appears to set below the horizon to someone standing at the pole quite variable from year to year, and makes it a guessing game for those down there when the sun will appear to disappear."
I assume, of course, that the position is unreliable according to the RET standards they are comparing to.
Feel free to show that in your model the NP, SP,or both observers can't see the Sun on the equinoxes.
The article you provided does not say anything about observers seeing the sun on the equinox. It's about how unreliable the behavior of the sun is.
The title of the article says it all: "Equinox sunset at South Pole? Promptly at ?? o'clock"
Please include the reasoning such as too distant to see. I don't even understand where the Sun is over your FE at midnight UT on the equinoxes. Could you at least answer that question.
The sun travels around the NP for 6 months of the year. For three of those months it is creating smaller and smaller circles, closing its radius until it reaches the Tropic of Cancer. Next it creates larger and larger circles until it reaches the equator. When the sun reaches the equator the Equinox Day occurs, which marks the changing of the seasons.
For the next six months sun then "switches gears" and travels around the SP for 6 months. It starts off creating large circles, closing its radius until it reaches the Tropic of Capricorn. Next it creates larger and larger circles until it again reaches the equator. A year has been completed and the process starts anew.
This movement explains why the North has long hot days in the Northern summer and short cold days in the Northern winter. It also explains why the South has short cold days in the Northern summer and long hot days in the Northern winter.
So even though ZP prohibits the use of hypotheses, Robotham uses them. I find that rather odd.
Rowbotham is combating the wild and absurd hypotheses of Round Earth Theory.