January 31, 2002: Hollow Planets - Jan Lamprecht - podcast episode cover

January 31, 2002: Hollow Planets - Jan Lamprecht

Feb 24, 20251 hr 47 minSeason 2002Ep. 823
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Episode description

Art Bell speaks with Jan Lamprecht, calling from Johannesburg, South Africa, about his book Hollow Planets and the feasibility of worlds with vast internal cavities. Lamprecht challenges conventional assumptions about Earth's interior, noting that everything below 20 miles is known only through seismology and extrapolation. He presents an alternative model where density decreases at depth, allowing seismic waves to curve around a central cavity rather than pass through solid mass.

The discussion covers gravity, with Lamprecht citing 18th-century mathematician Leonard Euler's arguments that gravity operates as a pressure rather than an attraction. He points to deep earthquakes occurring at 700 kilometers, far below where conventional theory says rock should flow rather than fracture, as evidence that conditions inside Earth differ dramatically from accepted models.

Lamprecht then turns to Arctic mysteries, describing the accounts of Admiral Peary and Dr. Frederick Cook, who reported seeing mountains and coastlines in areas now absent from modern maps. He discusses his plans for an Arctic expedition to investigate whether cartographic records have been deliberately altered, and whether the fog-shrouded landmass once called Crockerland still exists.
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