Search A Light In The Darkness

Tuesday 7 July 2015

Is life as we know it going to end? The scientific case for Nibiru/Planet X that will not go away

The most controversial "undiscovered" planet operating within our solar system dubbed Nibiru or Planet X was made (in)famous in 1976 by noted researcher-author Zecharia Sitchin in his bestselling book The 12th Planet. As one of few scholars able to read and interpret Sumerian clay tablets, Sitchin utilized those ancient texts to make a highly plausible case for the existence of Planet X (also known as planet Nibiru the Destroyer in ancient scripts) coming closest to planet earth every 3600 years. The Sumerians lived over 6000 years ago in what is today Iraq. They are credited as the first known civilization on earth, inventing mathematics, writing, agriculture, law, schools, astronomy and astrology. Zecharia Sitchin wrote that an advanced extraterrestrial civilization from Nibiru known as the Annunakis migrated to earth and interbred with the earthly humanoids, allegedly changing the DNA to what it is today. If the Sumerian account of its history is true as postulated by Sitchin, it easily explains why the Sumerian civilization was so advanced, aided by alien space travelers from another planet. And according to Sitchen's interpretation of the ancient texts of Samaria, we are now due for another Planet X earthly fly-by, literally shaking the earth off its polar axis while accompanied by a flurry of powerful earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, tsunamis and the most extreme weather events.

The sun in our solar system is similar to 90% of the solar systems in the Milky Way Galaxy, all part of a binary star system containing two or more suns. The Planet X system can be considered a mini-constellation consisting of our sun's twin, classified a brown dwarf star called Nemesis. This dark star is largely invisible even with infrared due to its surrounding red iron oxide dust clouds. Nemesis possesses at least three planets that revolve around it, Nibiru and Helion both with moons, and Arboda. Though Nibiru travels along an elliptical shaped orbit and enters our solar system approximately every 3600 years, one by one crossing the orbits of our solar system planets, it does not revolve around our sun...read more>>>...