Greyth wrote:But about this Nibiru thing. I did hear an astronomer say that they were looking for a large celestial body high on the ecliptic? Broadly in accordance with what the funny little chap said!
The "Nibiru" stuff is pure junk, cooked up from Sitchen's deliberate mistranslations and an extremely selective "analysis" of edited highlights of fragmentary ancient myths and a carving or two.
I did find something about some Japanese astronomers speculating on the existence of an outer planet beyond Neptune, though:
An Outer Planet Beyond Pluto and the Origin of the Trans-Neptunian Belt Architecture
The Astronomical Journal, Volume 135, Number 4 – April 2008
Trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs) are remnants of a collisionally and dynamically evolved planetesimal disk in the outer solar system. This complex structure, known as the trans-Neptunian belt (or Edgeworth-Kuiper belt), can reveal important clues about disk properties, planet formation, and other evolutionary processes. In contrast to the predictions of accretion theory, TNOs exhibit surprisingly large eccentricities, e, and inclinations, i, which can be grouped into distinct dynamical classes. Several models have addressed the origin and orbital evolution of TNOs, but none has reproduced detailed observations, e.g., all dynamical classes and peculiar objects, or provided insightful predictions. Based on extensive simulations of planetesimal disks with the presence of the four giant planets and massive planetesimals, we propose that the orbital history of an outer planet with tenths of the Earth's mass can explain the trans-Neptunian belt orbital structure. This massive body was likely scattered by one of the giant planets, which then stirred the primordial planetesimal disk to the levels observed at 40-50 AU and truncated it at about 48 AU before planet migration. The outer planet later acquired an inclined stable orbit (≥100 AU; 20-40°) because of a resonant interaction with Neptune (an r:1 or r:2 resonance possibly coupled with the Kozai mechanism), guaranteeing the stability of the trans-Neptunian belt. Our model consistently reproduces the main features of each dynamical class with unprecedented detail; it also satisfies other constraints such as the current small total mass of the trans-Neptunian belt and Neptune's current orbit at 30.1 AU. We also provide observationally testable predictions.
Note though that TNOs are described as having "tenths of the Earth's mass", so they're not exactly big as far as planets go. And a "resonant interaction with Neptune" means
orbital resonance, not "collision". And it should be further noted that this is conjectural: nobody's found it yet.
Claims made by authors which then come true (if this is true, and can in any way be battered into something which just about resembles Sitchen's daft claims) should not be mistaken for proof of the author's access to secret knowledge. You have to first consider how many claims the author is making, and how many he's getting wrong. If you spray enough ideas all over the place, and are generous enough in your interpretation of the actual facts, eventually you're bound to score a couple of hits in amongst all the many, many misses.
Jonathan Swift's
Gulliver's Travels, and Voltaire's
Micromegas, both refer to Mars having two moons. Proof that Swift and Voltaire were privy to alien secrets? Or bog-standard coincidence? Even odder is Edgar Allen Poe's
Eureka, prefiguring the Big Bang theory ...
>X-Files music<