Here’s
a question that has come up recently, given all the attacks on me. If Billy
Meier was not receiving his “secret” information from his Pleiadian pals, where
did he get it?
Can
we find a source and can we prove it?
How
about this?
According
to the 115th Contact, which took place on October 19, 1978, but was
not published until 1982/1986, we are told that the moon closest to Jupiter,
which is named Amalthea, “would only measure approximately 200 km in length,
which I defined as a gigantic hen's egg.”
Amalthea as photographs by Voyager. |
This
information is inaccurate. According to Science,
June 1, 1979, the diameter of the moon was given as 265 kilometers, plus or
minus 20 km and in Science, on
November 23, 1979 it size was calculated as 270 km, plus or minus 15 km.
Amalthea is not the moon closest to Jupiter, and it is now thought to be 250
kilometers or more long.
Meier
is close on this, but the measurements for Amalthea, as they appeared in the
newspaper, suggest that is the source of his information. The New York Times on March 7, 1979 reported Amalthea as 224 km
long, Aviation Week reported 200
- 220 km long on March 12, 1979, and The New York Times on April 1, 1979
reported it as 160 km long.
To
be fair, you can suggest that Meier’s estimate of the size isn’t all that far
off, but it is, in fact inaccurate. The size as reported by Meier is smaller
than the actual size of that moon and seems to match those sizes from the
newspaper. It would seem that space-faring race would be able to judge the size
of that moon more accurately than they did.
However,
Amalthea is not the closest to Jupiter, though until 1979, that was the
information available. The closest to Jupiter is Metis which was discovered in
1979 in photographs taken by Voyager 1.
Next in line is Adrastea, also discovered in 1979 but was discovered in
photographs taken by Voyager 2 and is the first natural moon to be discovered
by images taken from a spacecraft rather than
through a telescope. Both Metis
and Adrastea, are much smaller than Amalthea, something less than half its
size.
Adrastea, one of the 70 moons of Jupiter and the second closest to the planet. |
Interestingly,
Amalthea was discovered in September 1892 by Edward Emerson Barnard. So, in
October 1978, the astronomical information was that Amalthea was the closest to
Jupiter, but about a year later that information was revised. It’s odd that Meier
didn’t know that when he talked about these things in his 115th
Contact, if he was dealing with space travelers.
The
take away here is that Meier was wrong about the size of Amalthea, though not
by much. I’m not comfortable calling it a complete miss, though the information
about its size does seem to come from the newspaper articles published at the
time rather than another source.
The
real problem is the claim that it is closest to Jupiter. This is not true. It
is the third in distance, but in 1979, it was thought to be the closest. This
is a miss and was not based on anything other than the information available in
1979.
Already addressed at BMUFOC and BMUFOR websites:
ReplyDeleteBMUFOC - http://billymeierufocase.com/ike42.html#9
BMUFOR - http://www.billymeieruforesearch.com/prophecies-predictions-probability-calculations/analysis-of-contact-reports-101-196/#Jupiter8217s_Great_Red_Spot_Ring_Amalthea_Io8217s_Volcanism_Plasma_Torus
Stuart Robbins also covers this particular claim in the 90th Episode of Exposing PseudoAstronomy. I've linked that into the comments about Meier's Trans-Neptunian Object claims, so I will not relink it here.
ReplyDeleteStuart also covered Meier's changing claims about the rings of Jupiter, in one contact report he stated that the rings came from Io, a few years later he claimed the rings were cometary in origin. The cause is the same as in this blog entry, the reworking of material that appeared in the popular media.
It baffles me why anyone gives this story line a 'New York' seconds worth of attention. I can only guess there is not much to talk about these days. Of course here I am responding, so that makes me guilty as well!
ReplyDeleteOn to some serious issues...