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Old 26th-March-2007, 02:27 PM
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Earth and planets part 3 disease

The planets have more to do with global warming and environmental pressures on the life on Earth than any of man’s activities. A good example is the outbreak of disease in Mexico in 1574 that may have wiped out the Aztec civilization in Mexico. Epidemiologist Rodolfo Acuna-Soto, reporting in Time Magazine, refers to it as the time of Megadeath. The death toll forever altered the culture of Mesoamerica. The epidemic that appeared in 1545 followed by another In 1576, seem to be similar to the plagues of Europe and Asia. The Aztecs called these outbreaks by a separate name, COCOLITZLI. Acuna-Soto says COCOLITZLI quickly brought incomparable devastation that passed readily from one region to the next and killed quickly. The census data from the time of the Spanish invasion were so good that Acuna-Soto found he could track the movement of epidemics from village to village across the country. Acuna-Soto found a manuscript of Friar Juan De Torquemada, a Franciscan historian writing in 1577, describes the wake of COCLITZLI in detail, --It was a thing of great bewilderment to see the people die. Many were dead, and others almost dead, and nobody had the health or strength to help the diseased or bury the dead in the cities and large towns. Big ditches were dug and from morning to sunset, the priests did nothing but carry the dead bodies and throw them into the ditches. It lasted for a year and a half, and with great excess in the number of deaths. After the murderous epidemic, the Viceroy Martin Enriquez wanted to know the number of missing people in new Spain. After searching in towns and neighborhoods he found that the number of deaths were more than 2 million.
The theory presented by Acuna-Soto was a drought in the region had forced rodents to hole up at existing water holes and spread the disease throughout their progenitors. When the rains came the animals spread out for food leaving their disease infected feces and urine over the land. Winds of following droughts stirred up the disease laden dust infecting the natives with a hemorrhagic epidemic. Acuna-Soto counted 24 epidemics from 1545 to 1813 which matches the number of the Jupiter system force peaks accounting for rains followed by periods of droughts generated by my solar program.
Time Magazine reported a similar plague may have occurred in 1993 among Indians living in the four corners area of the United States. There, a virus called Hantavirus believed to be spread by deer mice. A report issued by the Centers for Disease Control set the agency’s theory. --Heavy snow falls and rainfall helped drought-stricken plants and animals to revive and grow in larger-than-usual numbers--- reproducing so rapidly that there were 10 times more mice in 1993 than there had been in May of 1992.--
A 1927 outbreak of the mice in the Buena Vista lake area of southern California illustrates how quickly a potential disaster can occur, This case did not have the accompanying disease. It was estimated the mice population to be 82,000 per acre after rains of November 1926 and February of 1927. Tender hearted people were loath to drive along the road to Taft because of so many mice on the road way. The Jupiter system force was very low from 1925 to 1937.
One hundred years earlier, in 1829, Hudson’s Bay Company’s French trappers entered California to find the beaver country of which the earlier trappers of Jedediah Smith’s men had told them. At this time, they reported the San Joaquin Valley was peppered with Indian villages containing fifty to one hundred dwellings each.
A separate expedition in 1833, found the villages practically wiped out by an epidemic of some type of intermittent fever and with many of the dead lying unburied.
The Jupiter system of force was remarkably similar to both the 1925 to 1927 event and the 1545-1574 Mexican events.
The Brewer’s notes of geologic survey of 1860-1864, riding up and down California on horseback, made reports of Indians in Northern California and higher elevations, but no reports of Indian villages in the San Joaquin Valley and very little habitation found only near the foothills, and lack of feed for his animals. He reported many dead cattle from the drought in the summer of 1864. Heavy runoff from storms carry with them 50% solids. The deposition from the great flood in the Sacramento and San Joaquin Valleys of the winter of 1861’62 reported by Brewer, could have buried any evidence of Indian villages.
By contrast, Jedediah Smith’s men spent the winter of 1827-28 in the San Joaquin Valley and wrote the valley was a hunter’s paradise but was mired down by swamps and mud in the Sacramento Valley. Smith never complained of lack of feed as did Brewer.
An era of stress releasing and therefore global warming had begun with the high stress force in the winter of 1623’24. This was the 8th highest stress force recorded since 323BC. The stress force began marching downward to a low stress force of the winter of 1932’33, again in the winter of 1969’70, the lowest stress force since the summer of 432BC and the winter of 463’63AD. The winter of 1988’89 began a rise in the stress force that will continue until the winter of 2239’40 and then level off for over 350 years until the winter of 2596‘97.
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