The seventh earth
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The Seventh Earth is an alternative view of the nature of this solar system and the origins of this Earth.
Its hypothesis is that the solar system can be regarded as a timeline of the entire life cycle of a planet. The major planets are all simply undergoing the same process, in the same pattern, at different stages. All the celestial bodies we see beyond us are the remains of previous Earths. They once all passed through the stage of this cycle that we are presently experiencing on this Earth, and when at that stage, they were all life sustaining. An Earth is a basic model, and as all people have two eyes a nose and a mouth, so all Earths, by way of a repeat tectonic pattern, have the same continent configuration as this one when they're in their prime. They all looked like this one - and if this one has people living on it, then they all did. Somewhere in the region of 600 billion human beings lived and died on them, as a part of their individual cycles. But, it seems that for reasons of a misinterpretation of geological and other geoscience related data, this is not apparent to anyone.
The starting point of this hypothesis, and one of the premises on which it is built, is the reassembly of the Earth's continents into a smaller sphere without ocean floors. This premise of Earth expansion has already existed for many decades in the Expanded earth theory ( EE ) which is now regarded as obsolete, but the continent reconstructions of The Seventh Earth differ from the pattern of continent movement that is central to the Expanded Earth models. The Seventh Earth reconstructions also accept and build on the basics of plate tectonics, particularly in relation to subduction and paleomagnetism, the significance of which are often questioned or rejected by the Expanding Earth societies. However, it is the more wide-spread conventional plate-tectonic continent reconstructions which are accepted by the majority of geoscientists which are in question in this context. These reconstructions are made on a constant radius, as it is generally believed that the Earth formed at its present diameter, based on the present prevailing theory of planet formation by accretion. The Seventh Earth outlines a concept which, by questioning accretion as the primary process in planet formation, changes the significance of many aspects of geology and astrophysics and ultimately the nature of our solar system.