What's below?

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magellanclavichord

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What's below?
« on: October 14, 2018, 09:31:41 AM »
So, being fairly new to FET, I'm wondering what's below? In another thread I made a joke that if you dig down far enough you'll hit turtles. But I'm wondering, what does FET say would happen if you could dig far enough down? People have dug and drilled pretty far down, so we know that the Earth is at least a mile or so thick because nobody has ever come out the bottom. But assuming it were possible to dig to an arbitrary depth, or if it were possible to get past the ice wall and over the edge, what would we find?

Is there an under-side to the Earth? And if so, what's it like? Or is there a dimensional distortion so that there is no bottom, but you'd dig forever, or curve around and come out at another point of the surface, as predicted by RET?

What's underneath the Earth?

I hope this thread will not become a debate on the truth or not of FET. I would like to find out what FET says about what's down there.

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Space Cowgirl

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Re: What's below?
« Reply #1 on: October 14, 2018, 10:27:26 AM »
There are probably only rocks under the earth.


p.s. this is the Q&A section of the forum. If someone tries to turn the thread into a debate it will get moved.
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wise

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Re: What's below?
« Reply #2 on: October 14, 2018, 12:19:47 PM »
So, being fairly new to FET, I'm wondering what's below? In another thread I made a joke that if you dig down far enough you'll hit turtles. But I'm wondering, what does FET say would happen if you could dig far enough down? People have dug and drilled pretty far down, so we know that the Earth is at least a mile or so thick because nobody has ever come out the bottom. But assuming it were possible to dig to an arbitrary depth, or if it were possible to get past the ice wall and over the edge, what would we find?

Is there an under-side to the Earth? And if so, what's it like? Or is there a dimensional distortion so that there is no bottom, but you'd dig forever, or curve around and come out at another point of the surface, as predicted by RET?

What's underneath the Earth?

I hope this thread will not become a debate on the truth or not of FET. I would like to find out what FET says about what's down there.

A material like water. Like the dome side.

The earth has been created stratified layers. the top of one layer is the bottom of the other layer. So that;

Whenever you look at the sky, meanwhile you see the bottom of this earth.
1+2+3+...+∞= 1



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magellanclavichord

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Re: What's below?
« Reply #3 on: October 16, 2018, 06:09:14 AM »
There are probably only rocks under the earth.

So, do the rocks go down forever? There's no "underside"?

p.s. this is the Q&A section of the forum. If someone tries to turn the thread into a debate it will get moved.

Excellent. Thanks.

Re: What's below?
« Reply #4 on: October 28, 2018, 07:37:43 PM »
I think the question is, ultimately what is supporting the flat planet?  If the flat surface is resting on rocks, or a pillar, or a stack of turtles, or floating on water, then what are the rocks/turtles/water/etc resting on?  What's beneath everything? 

If, on the other hand, the flat earth is resting on nothing, just floating or flying through space with an exposed underside, like a frisbee, there are all sorts of questions - what's on the underside - is it livable with its own plants and animals (maybe very different from what we have on this side) and maybe even some sort of people?  Howcome we haven't tried to find them or they find us? 

Re: What's below?
« Reply #5 on: November 20, 2018, 11:08:03 PM »
Wouldn't it be more accurate to say that the earth then has no underside? That the ground keeps extending infinitely downward just as space extends infinitely upwards? Space only exists as the absence of earth? Because otherwise, as Cartog pointed out, Earth would be an extremely large plane (or whichever shape that it is in; there are several contested viewpoints) moving through space.

Re: What's below?
« Reply #6 on: December 08, 2018, 12:47:20 AM »
Dirt then rock, then molten rock or magma.  Some places the magma is closer to the surface than others.  Below magma, who knows?  It could be a void of space or a solid core.