The Earth Without the Moon
by Immanuel Velikovsky
The Immanuel Velikovsky Archive
The period
when the Earth was Moonless is probably the most remote recollection
of mankind. Democritus and Anaxagoras taught that there was a time
when the Earth was without the Moon.(1)
Aristotle wrote that Arcadia in Greece, before being inhabited by
the Hellenes, had a population of Pelasgians, and that these aborigines
occupied the land already before there was a moon in the sky above
the Earth; for this reason they were called Proselenes.(2)
Apollonius
of Rhodes mentioned the time when not all the orbs were yet
in the heavens, before the Danai and Deukalion races came into existence,
and only the Arcadians lived, of whom it is said that they dwelt
on mountains and fed on acorns, before there was a moon. (3)
Plutarch wrote
in The Roman Questions: There were Arcadians of Evanders
following, the so-called pre-Lunar people.(4)
Similarly wrote Ovid: The Arcadians are said to have possessed
their land before the birth of Jove, and the folk is older than
the Moon. (5) Hippolytus refers
to a legend that Arcadia brought forth Pelasgus, of greater
antiquity than the moon.(6)
Lucian in his Astrology says that the Arcadians affirm
in their folly that they are older than the moon.(7)
Censorinus
also alludes to the time in the past when there was no moon in the
sky.(8)
Some allusions
to the time before there was a Moon may be found also in the Scriptures.
In Job 25:5 the grandeur of the Lord who Makes peace in the
heights is praised and the time is mentioned before
[there was] a moon and it did not shine. Also in Psalm 72:5
it is said: Thou wast feared since [the time of] the sun and
before [the time of] the moon, a generation of generations.
A generation of generations means a very long time.
Of course, it is of no use to counter this psalm with the myth of
the first chapter of Genesis, a tale brought down from exotic and
later sources.
The memory
of a world without a moon lives in oral tradition among the Indians.
The Indians of the Bogota highlands in the eastern Cordilleras of
Colombia relate some of their tribal reminiscences to the time before
there was a moon. In the earliest times, when the moon was
not yet in the heavens, say the tribesmen of Chibchas.(9)
There are currently
three theories of the origin of the moon:
1) The Moon
originated at the same time as the Earth, being formed substantially
from the same material, aggregating and solidifying.
2) The Moon
was formed not in the vicinity of the Earth, but in a different
part of the solar system, and was later captured by the Earth.
3) The Moon
was originally a portion of the terrestrial crust and was torn out,
leaving behind the bed of the Pacific.
All three
theories claim the presence of the Moon on an orbit around the Earth
for billions of years. Mythology may supply each of these views
with some support (Genesis I for the first view; the birth of Aphrodite
from the sea for the third view; Aphrodites origin in the
disruption of Uranus, and also the violence of Sin the Babylonian
Moon seems to support the second view).
Since mankind
on both sides of the Atlantic preserved the memory of a time when
the Earth was without the Moon, the first hypothesis, namely, of
the Moon originating simultaneously with the Earth and in its vicinity,
is to be excluded, leaving the other two hypotheses to compete between
themselves.
We have seen
that the traditions of diverse peoples offer corroborative testimony
to the effect that in a very early age, but still in the memory
of mankind, no moon accompanied the Earth.(10)
Since human beings already peopled the Earth, it is improbable that
the Moon sprang from it: there must have existed a solid lithosphere,
not a liquid earth. Thus while I do not claim to know the origin
of the Moon, I find it more probable that the Moon was captured
by the Earth. Such an event would have occurred as a catastrophe.(11)
If the Moons formation took place away from the Earth,(12)
its composition may be quite different.
There is no
evidence to suggest whether the Moon was a planet, a satellite of
another planet, or a comet at the time of its capture by the Earth.
Whatever atmosphere it may have had(13)
was pulled away by the Earth, by other contacting bodies, or dissipated
in some other way.
Since the
time the Moon began to accompany the Earth, it underwent the influence
of contacts with comets and planets that passed near the Earth in
subsequent ages. The mass of the Moon being less than that of the
Earth, the Moon must have suffered greater disturbances in cosmic
contacts. During these contacts the Moon was not carried away: this
is due to the fact that no body more powerful than the Earth came
sufficiently close to the Moon to take it away from the Earth for
good; but in the contacts that took place the Moon was removed repeatedly
from one orbit to another.
The variations
in the position of the Moon can be read in the variations in the
length of the month. The length of the month repeatedly changed
in subseqent catastrophic events and for this there exists
a large amount of supporting evidence. In these later occurrences
the Moon played a passive role, and Zeus in the Iliad advised
it (Aphrodite) to stay out of the battle in which Athene and Ares
(Venus and Mars) were the main contestants.
References
-
Hippolytus,
Refutatio Omnium Haeresium V. ii.
-
Aristotle,
fr. 591 (ed. V. Rose [Teubner:Tuebingen, 1886] ). Cf. Paulys
Realencyclopaedie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft,
article Mond ; H. Roscher, Lexicon d. griech.
und roemisch. Mythologie, article Proselenes.
-
Argonautica
IV.264.
-
Plutarch,
Moralia, transl. by F. C. Babbit, sect. 76.
-
Fasti,
transl. by Sir J. Frazer, II. 290.
-
Refutatio
Omnium Haeresium V. ii.
-
Lucian,
Astrology, transl. by A. M. Harmon (1936), p. 367, par.
26.
-
Liber
de die natali 19; also scholium on Aristophanes Clouds,
line 398.
-
A.
von Humboldt, Vues des Cordillères (1816), English
transl.: Researches Concerning the Institutions and Monuments
of the Ancient Inhabitants of America, (1814), vol. I, p.
87; cf. H. Fischer, In mondener Welt (1930), p. 145.
-
[In
addition to the sources cited above, cf. The Nihongi Chronicles
of Japan (I.ii, in Transactions and Proceedings of the
Japanese Society, vol. I [1896]) which recount how Heaven
and Earth . . . produced the Moon-god. The Kalevala
of the Finns recalls a time when the Moon was placed in
orbit. (Rune III.35)]
-
[Cf.
the effects of such an event on the Earths rotation calculated
by H. Gerstenkorn in Zeitschrift fuer Astrophysik, 36
(1955), p. 245; cf. idem, in Mantles of the Earth and the
Terrestrial Planets, S. K. Runcorn ed., (New York, 1967);
also idem in Icarus 9 (1968), p. 394.]
-
[Cf.
H. Alfven and G. Arrhenius, Two Alternatives for the History
of the Moon, Science 165 (1969), 11ff.; S. F. Singer
and L. W. Banderman, Where was the Moon Formed?
Science 170 (1970), 438-439: . . . The moon was
formed independently of the earth and later captured, presumably
by a three-body interaction, and these events were followed
by the dissipation of the excess energy through tidal friction
in a close encounter. More recently, a study of lunar
paleotides has shown that the Moon could not have been
formed in orbit around the Earth (A. J. Anderson, Lunar
Paleotides and the Origin of the Earth-Moon System, The
Moon and the Planets, 19 [1978], 409-417). Because of a
certain degree of instability in the Sun-Earth-Moon system,
the planetary origin and capture of the Moon by the Earth
becomes a strong dynamic possibility. (V. Szebehely and
R. McKenzie, Stability of the Sun-Earth-Moon System,
The Astronomical Journal 82 (1977), 303ff.].
-
[Cf. Yu. B. Chernyak, On Recent
Lunar Atmosphere, Nature, 273 (15 June, 1978),
pp. 497ff. The author found strong theoretical evidence
of a considerable atmosphere on the Moon during the greater
part of its history.]
Reprinted
from the The
Immanuel Velikovsky Archive.
December
3, 2011
Copyright
© 2011 The
Immanuel Velikovsky Archive
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