Planet X: SLOWING Rotation 2
Where this has not left its mark in the geology of the Earth, folklore
from around the world reports a long day or long night during the
cataclysms (tidal waves, hurricane winds, earthquakes, volcanic
eruptions) that accompany a passage of Planet X. This is reported as a
long day in Egypt, and a long night on the West Coast of the Americas,
in keeping with what the Zetas report is the portion of the Earth
gripped by the magnetic Planet X as it approaches from the south, coming
between the Sun and the Earth.
Worlds in Collision, On the Other Side of the Ocean,
by Velikovsky
The Book of Joshua, compiled from the more ancient
Book of Jasher, states that the sun stood still over
Gibeon and the moon over the valley of Ajalon. This
description of the position of the luminaries implies
that the sun was in the forenoon position. The Book
of Joshua says that the luminaries stood in the midst
of the sky. Allowing for the difference in longitude, it
must have been early morning or night in the Western
Hemisphere. We go to the shelf where stand books with
the historical traditions of the aborigines of Central
America. The sailors of Columbus and Cortes, arriving
in America, found there literate peoples who had books
of their own. In the Mexican Annals of Cuauhtitlan,
written in Nahua-Indian, it is related that during a
cosmic catastrophe that occurred in the remote past, the
night did not end for a long time. Sahagun, the Spanish
savant who came to America a generation after
Columbus and gathered the traditions of the aborigines,
wrote that at the time of one cosmic catastrophe the sun
rose only a little way over the horizon and remained
there without moving. The moon also stood still. The
biblical stories were not know to the aborigines. Also,
the tradition preserved by Sahagun bears no trace of
having been introduced by the missionaries.