- Genre:science
- Sub-genre:Earth Sciences / General
- Language:English
- Pages:424
- Paperback ISBN:9798903833627
Book details
Overview
ECDO Theory proposes a physical mechanism linking flood myths, ancient monuments, geophysical anomalies, and climate change — suggesting these are not isolated phenomena, but expressions of a single underlying process within the Earth system. This work outlines and substantiates a novel theory that carries profound implications for the future of humanity.
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Inversion — ECDO Theory - The Mechanisms Behind Flood Myths, Ancient Monuments, and Climate Change presents a rigorously developed, interdisciplinary hypothesis that challenges conventional compartmentalization of Earth's most enduring mysteries.
Across geology, climatology, and archaeology lie a set of persistent anomalies — global flood narratives preserved across civilizations, unexplained orientations of ancient monuments, abrupt climatic discontinuities, and deep-Earth energy signals that defy standard models. Traditionally treated as unrelated, these phenomena are here examined as potential expressions of a single underlying geophysical process.
ECDO Theory (Exothermic Core–Mantle Decoupling — Dzhanibekov Oscillation) proposes a constraint-based mechanism within the Earth system capable of producing rapid shifts in orientation, energy redistribution, and surface effects that would register simultaneously in climate records, geological strata, and human history.
Central to this work is a striking empirical observation: a substantial majority of pre-500 BCE monumental structures — spanning continents and cultures — exhibit a preferential alignment toward a common geographic locus. This pattern, termed obsequience, resists explanation under conventional astronomical or cultural models, yet emerges naturally under the framework proposed herein. The author proposes that this geographic locus is a former true north pole around which the Earth rotated in antiquity — observed and heavily documented by ancient cultures worldwide.
The theory further engages longstanding archaeological anomalies, including the architectural precision and geospatial relationships of the Great Pyramid of Khufu and the debated oceanic-inundation erosion patterns of the Pyramid of Khafre, exploring whether these features reflect conditions and reference frames different from those observed today.
In the modern era, the model extends beyond retrospective interpretation into forward prediction. Notably, it anticipated a significant transient of heat entering the ocean system from abyssal depths — an event subsequently observed in 2023 through independent oceanographic data. This and other testable forecasts serve as a cornerstone of the theory's methodological posture: observation, formulation, constraint, and auditable prediction.
Rather than asserting finality, this work invites disciplined examination. It lays out its assumptions, competing explanations, and areas of uncertainty with clarity, positioning ECDO Theory as a falsifiable and extensible framework rather than a closed doctrine.
If correct, the implications are profound. The Earth may not be the stable, slowly evolving system it is often presumed to be, but one capable of episodic, system-wide transitions with consequences for climate, geography, and civilization itself.
Inversion is written for readers willing to engage complex evidence and follow it where it leads — across disciplines, across time, and toward a deeper understanding of the dynamic planet we inhabit.
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