I've heard this before about the landmass "flower," with Jerusalem at its centre, but Genesis only speaks of the seas being brought together into one place, not the land. Besides, the erosive power of the Noachian deluge would have been so great that I doubt any evidence of continental plates would have survived. Nick - how, exactly, did you measure the "flower pattern" on your computer monitor? If I know this, then Steven and I can alter the program to give precise ratios. Neville. Philip <joyphil@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: Thanks Jack for pointing me to this direction. Interesting stuff. This lot is going to keep me quiet for a while. Has any one gotten onto anything specific to this subject: Fibonacci's Flower Pattern. . I do not know the material significance. 1+2 =3 2+3 =5 3+5 =8 and so the sequence goes on. Philip. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jack Lewis" To: Sent: Tuesday, August 31, 2004 3:47 AM Subject: [geocentrism] Jerusalem and flower paterns I've forwarded this on to the forum from a friend - Bob Short. Hi There! I wonder if you have heard of a man called Fernand Crombette? He was a French Roman Catholic who, while helping his daughter with a school project one day, noticed the wording of Verse 12 of Psalm 74: "Yet God my King is from of old, working salvation in the midst of the earth". Apparently he came to the conclusion, after some thought and meditation, that if the Bible was literally true then Jerusalem was probably the centre of the world. Crombette's inspired idea led him to look below the present contours of the continents, which vary according to the sea level, to the extreme edge of the continental shelf at a depth of 2,000 metres, where the sea bed falls away in a sharp drop into the ocean depths of 4,000 metres. Sixty years later, sub-marine drillings have confirmed that the continental granite shelf, beneath the marine sediments, is, in fact, found at this point. Having formulated his hypothesis, Crombette worked for twelve years (1933-1945) reconstructing the primitive continent. The pieces of the puzzle included the rock beds and islands today scattered over the basaltic depths of the seas. He also showed the path taken by each continental mass to reach its present position. The result confounded all expectation.The single continent that emerged had the regular form of a flower of eight petals, with Jerusalem at its centre. Now there's a thought! You can read more about Crombette's works on the net. Just use Google or whatever and type Fernand Crombette. Cheers mates! Love, Bob --------------------------------- ALL-NEW Yahoo! Messenger - all new features - even more fun!