WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
The Hollow Earth cover

The Hollow Earth

Chapter 18: XV. METEORS.
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The author advances a speculative model of a hollow planetary interior and critiques established geological and astronomical explanations. Organized as short chapters, the text examines heat generation, ocean currents, ice formation, glaciers, earthquakes, volcanoes, springs and wells, and meteor phenomena, arguing that friction, water distribution, and internal cavities better explain observations than molten cores, polar points, or standard gravity laws. It questions accepted origins of the Gulf Stream, ice belts, volcanic activity, and artesian pressures, considers surface influences and polarity shifts, and concludes with a summary and appendix. The tone mixes polemic and popular scientific reasoning to invite readers to reconsider conventional theories.

XV.
METEORS.

These are nothing more or less than dust particles thrown from volcanic eruptions on some planet, and in countless numbers drifting through time and space till sucked into the atmosphere of some other orb.

Whoever doubts the influence of friction ought to be convinced by watching these meteoric specks falling through our atmosphere of a clear evening, although the process goes on as much in day as night time.

While falling in space this dust must gain an inconceivable speed, as a feather without resistance falls as rapidly as a ball of lead.

The contact with our atmosphere ignites and evidently consumes them into gas before reaching the Earth. They used to be called falling stars, but if they were of inferior magnitude it is quite probable there would have been many a badly bumped head before this time, from the numbers that have fallen.