by Ellyn Lapointe
January 17 2025
from
DailyMail Website
also trough
WayBackMachine Website
Spanish version
A book that was classified by the CIA
for more
than 50 years contains a shocking theory
about how the world will
end.
(STOCK)
A book classified by the CIA for more than 50 years contains a
shocking theory about how the world will end.
'The
Adam And Eve Story - The History of Cataclysms,'
written by former US Air Force employee, UFO researcher and
self-acclaimed psychic Chan Thomas, was written in 1966 but
its publication was halted by the agency.
It was quietly declassified in 2013, at least in part, but remained
hidden in the CIA's database - until now.
In the book, Thomas claims that every 6,500 years, a major disaster
on the scale of the Biblical 'Great Flood' strikes the Earth.
While experts debate the exact date of that flood in the Book of
Genesis, Thomas asserts that it happened roughly 6,500 years ago,
and there is some archaeological and geological evidence to support
that claim.
By that logic, Thomas argues that the next catastrophe is imminent.
As for what the end of the world will look like, Thomas believes
that Earth's magnetic field will suddenly, drastically shift,
wreaking havoc across the planet.
The reason behind the book was classified remains unclear, but some
have suggested the agency was concerned the book would cause mass
panic, or leak information related to secret government research.
Thomas had connections to classified projects during his time at the
defunct aerospace company McDonnell Douglas. He was part of a small
team of scientists assembled by the company to investigate reports
of UFOs.
While there are no official records of Thomas working directly for
the CIA, the agency's secrecy agreement means past employees need to
get approval before publishing books and other works of
communication.
'In California, the mountains shake like
ferns in a breeze; the mighty Pacific rears back and piles up
into a mountain of water more than two miles high, then starts
its race eastward,' Thomas wrote in his book.
'In a fraction of a day all vestiges of civilization are gone,
and the great cities - Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago,
Dallas, New York - are nothing but legends,' he writes. 'Barely
a stone is left where millions walked just a few hours before.'
The first chapter, titled 'The Next Cataclysm,' starts with:
'Like Noah's 6,500 years ago... Like Adam and
Eve's 11,500 years ago... This, too will come to pass...'
The cryptic opening suggests that the next
cataclysm is poised to occur any day now.
The book features 55 pages, but Thomas wrote more than 200. The rest
are still kept top-secret to this day. And the reason for the CIA's
involvement remains a mystery.
The apocalyptical tale begins with the destruction of California,
explaining how winds,
'with the force of a thousand armies' will
shred everything in sight with its 'supersonic bombardment,' as
the Pacific tsunami drowns Los Angeles and San Francisco 'as if
they were but grains of sand.'
Thomas claims these impacts will overtake the
entire North American continent 'within three hours,' as an
earthquake simultaneously creates massive cracks in the ground that
allow magma to rise to the surface.
'The Adam and Eve Story,'
written by Chan
Thomas,
was published
in 1966
and partly
declassified in 2013
The book's author Chan Thomas
was a former US
Air Force employee,
UFO researcher
and self-acclaimed psychic
But it won't just be North America that is swallowed by the
destruction.
None of the seven continents will be able to escape the onslaught,
Thomas writes, with each one experiencing slightly different
versions of the same dramatic end.
By the seventh day,
'the horrendous rampage is over,' and the
entire Earth has changed, he writes.
'The Bay of Bengal basin, just east of India, is now at the
North Pole. The Pacific Ocean, just west of Peru, is at the
South Pole,' Thomas explains.
Even Greenland and Antarctica have been thrown toward the
equator, and 'find their ice caps dissolving madly in the
tropical heat.'
Thomas paints a terrifying picture of
civilization-destroying climate change and tectonic rearrangement.
But there is no scientific evidence to suggest
that such a cataclysm is possible.
'It's just unfortunate that these things are
being put out there,' Martin Mlynczak, a senior research
scientist at the NASA Langley Research Center, told
The Verge.
'Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof.
And there's no proof and no science and no
physics behind any of the claims about the magnetic field change
being associated with climate change.'
What's more, there is no evidence to suggest that
the Earth's magnetic field ever has, or ever will, make the
90-degree flip that Thomas describes.
Earth's magnetic poles do shift,
and have done
so hundreds of times throughout the planet's history.
But this never
causes the kind of widespread devastation
that Thomas
described
Thomas states that the last
catastrophe
of this nature
- Noah's Biblical flood - happened 6,500 years ago,
and that this
means we're due for the next one.
But this date
is contested...
'That is totally bogus.
If that's what
happened every 6,500 years, we would certainly see it; it would
be in all the records... The amount of energy to bring that
about is tremendous.
And you know, there's nothing to initiate
it,' Mlynczak said.
That said, Earth's magnetic poles do shift and
have done so hundreds of times throughout the planet's history,
according to NASA.
This phenomenon is called a 'pole
reversal'...
Paleomagnetic records suggest it occurs about
every 300,000 years on average, though the actual time intervals
vary widely.
'During a pole reversal, the magnetic field
weakens, but it doesn't completely disappear,'
NASA states.
'The magnetosphere, together with Earth's atmosphere, continue
protecting Earth from cosmic rays and charged solar particles,
though there may be a small amount of particulate radiation that
makes it down to Earth's surface.
'The magnetic field becomes jumbled, and multiple magnetic poles
can emerge in unexpected places.'
But this never causes the kind of widespread
devastation that Thomas described in his book.
Even if his theory about why and how the world will end had
scientific merit, there would still be reason to question his claim
that the apocalypse is imminent.
He states that,
the last catastrophe of this nature - Noah's
Biblical flood - happened 6,500 years ago, and that this means
we're due for the next one...
There is some geological and archaeological evidence to suggest that
date may be correct.
For example, a 2006 study claimed that
6,500-year-old wood recovered from the 'landing site of Noah's
ark' was actually part of the ark itself.
But the wood's age has been challenged by other experts.
The more widely accepted date-range for the flood
is between 4,000 and 5,000 years ago.
If this event truly occurred during that
time, then Thomas' estimated timing for the end of the world
would be more than 1,000 years off.
Therefore, all the evidence suggests that the
violent disaster detailed in 'The Adam and Eve Story' will "not"
actually come to pass...
|