NIBIRU



BY

NINA C. FULFORD

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THE MOTION OF ITS PASSAGE

For those people who think that Nibiru will destroy the Earth in 2003 I would like to give you a short lecture on the dynamics of planetary motions.

Let's begin with the motion of our planet around our Sun. We are orbiting our Sun in a counterclockwise motion. It takes us one year to make that orbit. Nibiru is orbiting our Sun in a clockwise motion. According to Zacharia Sitchin, it takes that body 3,600 years to orbit our Sun. It is on the longest orbit of any planet/body in our solar system.

When our telescopes first see Nibiru, it will still be too far out for the naked eye to observe. By the time it is visible to the naked eye it should be at the same distance that we could see our other visible planets. Since we have never observed the action of this planet in modern memory we are not sure of the speed with which it is moving through our stars system. However fast it is going it still will not come within range of the earth for a number of years.

In fact we will probably make our yearly trip around the sun for a number of years before it comes anywhere near us. What we will see will be a star getting brighter every time we make our circuit around the Sun. Some people are guessing about seven years from first sighting to its passage past us. However, I would estimate the length of time it would take to come into the Earth's vicinity from the time of first sighting to be around 1,000 years. If it's motion around the Sun is 3,650 years then from apogee to peragee would be half of that. And first sighting would probably be in last quarter of that motion, which would be roughly 1,000 years.

Certainly by the first year of it's naked eye sighting our Astronomers will by then have been able to calculate it's orbit and the dangers or none dangers to our planet. That it will have an affect upon us is not to be denied by any sane person. However, ALL THE PLANETS have an affect upon the human psyche, as the ancients were well aware. It's speed, orbit, and affects on other planets as it passes them, and its very material it is made of will have its affects on us.

As a matter of fact, like Mars, which is seen as the planet of war and strife, Nibiru may also have this affect on our planet. If we are aware of how planets can effect us maybe we can look at our behavior and offset its negative qualities. Forewarned is forearmed isn't it?

It isn't Nibiru we should be worried about but what it carries along with it, both before and behind it. The Ancient's referred to them as "The Dogs Of War" because they brought with them disaster to the Earth. These are the what may be called the flotsom and jetsom of space debris caught in its forces. Small debris being forced ahead of its wave through the heavens, and other debris attracted by it's motion in it's wake.





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Last modified on August 11,2005


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