Pole Shift
Pole Shift
Pole Shift
Shift
". . . We may be standing at the edge of the ultimate disaster. If we avoid or ignore
the possibility of a pole shift, we will have only ourselves to blame should there be a
cataclysmic repeat of the `myth' of Atlantis."
-- John White, Pole Shift
Not just satisfied to rotate and revolve, the Earth gives a grandiose hiccup every
couple of few millennia when the poles shift sharply by tens of degrees, sending
icecaps sliding into oceans, flash-freezing mammoths, ripping holes in formerly
placid continents and coastlines, and hurling whole civilizations into the drink. At
least it does in the world of High Weirdness, where little trivia like the laws of
thermodynamics can nod off with no one the wiser. Psychics, magi and mad
scientists differ on whether the Great Pole Shift is the ultimate disaster, or the
ultimate opportunity. As a GM, of course, your answer is "both."
The "sleeping seer" Edgar Cayce seems to get the most credit in the modern era for
predicting the Great Pole Shift, which he said would be caused by earthquakes and
tectonic instability -- and begin in 1936. However, Cayce was only the best-known
prophet to revive an old theme in crank science and mysticism going back to Plato's
dialogue The Statesman, if not before. The theory took a rest during the ascendancy
of Ptolemy's fixed Earth, but came roaring back after Copernicus unhinged
everything again. Burnet and Whiston, two English churchmen in Newtonian
England, came up with divergent theories on the Pole Shift to reconcile
Enlightenment mechanics and Biblical history. Following them was a whole parade
of folk including Fourier, the founder of socialism and Blavatsky, the founder of
Theosophy. Velikovsky put Pole Shifts into his Worlds In Collision tales of wandering
comets (as did Nazi astronomer Hans Hoerbiger), and a chap named Hugh
Auchincloss Brown in 1948 adduced the Greek geographer Leucippus' explanation
(unequal ice formation at the poles) for the coming disaster. The Norwich
shoemaker (and member of the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor) Sampson Mackey
described -- in verse -- a detailed theory of "organic" pole shifting, where the
shifts are just part of the natural "wobble" of the Earth. Most recently, a channeler
named Lori Toye received Pole Shift information from Saint-Germain in 1983, and
drew an attractive map of the post-Pole Shift Earth. And if you can't trust Saint-
Germain, who can you trust?
"On the basis of a decade's hindsight, I think that the possibility of a catastrophic
pole shift at the end of this century is increasingly unlikely. To be more precise, I do
not think a pole shift will occur as predicted."
-- John White, a decade later
Well, if you're determined to be an old meany about it, you can trust geologists and
astrophysicists, all of whom have pretty solid evidence that even if a sudden Pole
Shift were possible (it isn't), it hasn't happened in geological time, and certainly not
in recent history. Charles Hapgood's (of Piri Reis map fame) dogged 1958 theory
that the poles don't dramatically shift, but the Earth's crust does (which Einstein
contributed a preface to) is as close to real science as any of them get, and it ain't
that damn close. (As a geologist, Einstein was a great physicist.) But that's no
reason to slow anyone down. There are as many different causes of the Pole Shift
(meteors and comets, the rogue 12th planet, alignment of the non-rogue other
planets, volcanoes, ice caps growing, ice caps melting, natural wobbliness, aliens,
divine intervention) as there are results (total global catastrophe, return to a
paradisiac Golden Age, evolution into a fifth dimension, return of the giant
Lemurians) and target dates (December 21, 2012 is the usual suspect here, but
Richard Noone's delightfully twitchy 5/5/2000 -- Ice: the Ultimate Disaster gives,
well, May 5, 2000, and the Greys say it's coming in 2003). As always, Joscelyn
Godwin's euphonious Arktos: The Polar Myth in Science, Symbolism, and Nazi
Survival is an indispensable source for this, and similar, fun.
"The Zetas talk about how most of humanity is in Millennium Denial; that the Earth
will experience cataclysmic changes described in a Zeta Vision given to Nancy . . .
The Zetas say that in spite of Millennium Fever the government will not Sound the
Alarm . . . that the establishment is Suppressing the Word and hiding the truth
behind Cataclysm Masks . . . that signs such as Deformed Frogs and the increasing
incidence of Deep Quakes are appearing . . . there will be Crop Failure for three
years running going into the shift but these will not be caused by Psi-Tech
Pathogens, and that . . . Diet Adjustments will occur."
-- Zeta Reticulan spokesmen, as channeled by "Nancy"
The Pole Shift doesn't have to be the nova in your campaign; it can be the Big
Secret battled over by the hidden factions. Since the axis around which the pole
shifts will remain relatively unscathed in the disaster, rival entities might try setting
off Pole Shifts designed to "Atlantis" their enemies while leaving them stable and
pretty. Perhaps the CIA plans to use the HAARP projectors in Alaska to trigger the
Pole Shift and screw over the Japanese, or to stop the Grey-aligned NSA/MJ-12
group from dumping one on Europe with the ELF sonic transponders in the oceanic
trenches. A campaign of high-tension Weather (and Earthquake, and Volcano, and
Typhoon) War, with global devastation as the stakes, makes a fine blend of GURPS
Illuminati and my old disaster column. Make the Pole Shifters dependent upon the
ley lines or power points of the Earth's Global Grid, and you can add GURPS Places
of Mystery to the mix.
". . . It was clear now that the Tower of Babel had been simply an attempt, however
hasty and deservedly a failure because of the pride of its architects, to build the
most powerful menhir of all. But the Babylonians got their calculations wrong. As
Father Kircher has demonstrated, had the Tower [of Babel] reached its peak, its
excessive weight would have made the earth's axis rotate ninety degrees and maybe
more . . ."
-- Umberto Eco, Foucault's Pendulum
With magical Pole Shifting, you don't even have to use it as a modern McGuffin;
Eco's Templars were using the "telluric currents" to plot their own Pole Shifts in the
13th century, and a clever GM can make anyone from the pyramid builders of
GURPS Egypt to the arcology architects of GURPS Cyberworld (or GURPS
CthulhuPunk, heh, heh, heh) hip to the power of the Big Ooops. Tie Cayce's failed
1936 prediction to Hoerbiger's theories and toss a Pole Shift into a GURPS
Cliffhangers game for instant Lost World adventures. The Pole Shift can make a
great device for the Monumental Age ancient astronauts campaign frame I
mentioned earlier, as the Lemurians, Hyperboreans, and Atlanteans battle to sink
each others' not-yet-Lost Continents in 10,000 B.C. As the elusive Benjamin
Vandgrift suggests, perhaps these "lost races" still battle for control of an ancient
astronaut Pole Shifter hidden somewhere on Earth -- that would make an interesting
twist on the standard Illuminati vs. Rosicrucians game.
You can even set closer-to-real historical games around the Pole Shift -- Immanuel
Velikovsky found signs of the Great Pole Shift in the stories of the Exodus and the
sun standing still for Joshua (second millennium B.C., give or take). Herodotus
reports that the sun swapped directions (the visible sign of the Great Pole Shift if
you don't happen to be in the way of a sliding ice cap) four times in Egyptian
recorded history. The earth really has swapped magnetic poles in geological time,
and there's nontrivial evidence that the "Folgheraiter Event" of 860 B.C. marked the
last such -- a fine time to toss in a Great Pole Shift to go. Did a Templar Pole Shift
cause the exceptional good weather of the High Middle Ages (grapes in
Massachusetts!), and did their arrest cause the Great Famine of 1315, when their
cathedral-driven Pole Shifter went haywire?
To Pole Shift your current game, simply decide where you want the new equator to
be -- if, say, you want to see the jungle reclaim the Eiffel Tower, get a globe and
run a string around it that passes through Paris. You'll find you have a real choice of
places to put the rest of the equator, so you might want to narrow it down by picking
somewhere halfway around the world to get the icecap. (That can be some boring
chunk of land you care nothing for, or a Lost City you intend to bury in the glaciers,
Fortress of Solitude style.) Then, once you've picked the new Poles, shift! You may
have to twitch a flat map around a while before you get the hang of it, but don't be
afraid to let continents drift wildly, flood seacoasts, turn rivers into seas and lakes
into deserts, and otherwise act up big. Suddenly, you've got a big world with all-
new geography, just like a Standard Fantasy World -- but with evocative names and
cool potential for survivor cultures and awesome ruins. ("The Ancient Ones called it .
. . the Chrysler Building.")
"Because when the poles shift, we will go through an electromagnetic `no zone' for
about three and a half days, and then, after that time we'll be on a totally different
dimensional level of the Earth. Whereby anything that is happening on this level will
make no difference. That's a preparation prior to the time when all the systems, the
social and the financial systems and all this kind of thing breaks down."
After the shift, a brave new world awaits you. The Great Pole Shift is an excellent
reason to have magic return, if it ever went away. The conspiracy which created the
Shift, whether it's alien-savvy MJ-12, revenant Templars, or finally-triumphant
Lemurians, will still be around from their Place of Refuge. The ecology has
crunched, which justifies restoring tyrannosaurs (if people don't mind a Pole Shift,
they won't mind a time-rip or a genetic experiment gone awry) for that great
Cadillacs and Dinosaurs feel. If the Shift happens in 2012 (or was caused by aliens),
you can have pockets of higher-than-high tech, although much of the world will be
in a Mad Max state, or even dropped to sword-and-sandal barbarism. In short, you
can have anything you want in the world, if you're willing to turn it upside down first.
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