PART SIX:
Conclusion
In concluding this history of my adventures, I wish to state that I
firmly believe science is yet in its infancy concerning the cosmology
of the earth. There is so much that is unaccounted for by the world's
accepted knowledge of to-day, and will ever remain so until the land
of "The Smoky God" is known and recognized by our geographers.
It is the land from whence came the great logs of cedar that have been
found by explorers in open waters far over the northern edge of the
earth's crust, and also the bodies of mammoths whose bones are found
in vast beds on the Siberian coast.
Northern explorers have done much. Sir John Franklin, De Haven Grinnell,
Sir John Murray, Kane, Melville, Hall, Nansen, Schwatka, Greely, Peary,
Ross, Gerlache, Bernacchi, Andree, Amsden, Amundson and others have
all been striving to storm the frozen citadel of mystery.
I firmly believe that Andree and two brave companions, Strindberg and
Fraenckell, who sailed away in the balloon "Oreon" from the northwest
coast of Spitsbergen on that Sunday afternoon of July 11, 1897, are
now in the "within" world, and doubtless are being entertained as my
father and myself were entertained by the kind-hearted giant race inhabiting
the inner Atlantic Continent.
Having, in my humble way, devoted years to these problems, I am well
acquainted with the accepted definitions of gravity, as well as the
cause of the magnetic needle's attraction, and I am prepared to say
that it is my firm belief that the magnetic needle is influenced solely
by electric currents which completely envelop the earth like a garment,
and that these electric currents in an endless circuit pass out of the
southern end of the earth's cylindrical opening, diffusing and spreading
themselves over all the "outside" surface, and rushing madly on in their
course toward the North Pole. And while these currents seemingly dash
off into space at the earth's curve or edge, yet they drop again to
the "inside" surface and continue their way southward along the inside
of the earth's crust, toward the opening of the so-called South Pole.24
24"Mr. Lemstrom concluded that an electric discharge
which could only be seen by means of the spectroscope was taking place
on the surface of the ground all around him, and that from a distance
it would appear as a faint display of Aurora, the phenomena of pale
and flaming light which is some times seen on the top of the Spitzbergen
Mountains." -- The Arctic Manual, page 739.
As to gravity, no one knows what it is, because it has not been determined
whether it is atmospheric pressure that causes the apple to fall, or
whether, 150 miles below the surface of the earth, supposedly one-half
way through the earth's crust, there exists some powerful loadstone
attraction that draws it. Therefore, whether the apple, when it leaves
the limb of the tree, is drawn or impelled downward to the nearest point
of resistance, is unknown to the students of physics.
Sir James Ross claimed to have discovered the magnetic pole at about
seventy-four degrees latitude. This is wrong - the magnetic pole is
exactly one-half the distance through the earth's crust. Thus, if the
earth's crust is three hundred miles in thickness, which is the distance
I estimate it to be, then the magnetic pole is undoubtedly one hundred
and fifty miles below the surface of the earth, it matters not where
the test is made. And at this particular point one hundred and fifty
miles below the surface, gravity ceases, becomes neutralized; and when
we pass beyond that point on toward the "inside" surface of the earth,
a reverse attraction geometrically increases in power, until the other
one hundred and fifty miles of distance is traversed, which would bring
us out on the "inside" of the earth.
Thus, if a hole were bored down through the earth's crust at London,
Paris, New York, Chicago, or Los Angeles, a distance of three hundred
miles, it would connect the two surfaces. While the inertia and momentum
of a weight dropped in from the "outside" surface would carry it far
past the magnetic center, yet, before reaching the "inside" surface
of the earth it would gradually diminish in speed, after passing the
half-way point, finally pause and immediately fall back toward the "outside"
surface, and continue thus to oscillate, like the swinging of a pendulum
with the power removed, until it would finally rest at the magnetic
center, or at that particular point exactly one-half the distance between
the "outside" surface and the "inside" surface of the earth.
The gyration of the earth in its daily act of whirling around in its
spiral rotation -- at a rate greater than one thousand miles every hour,
or about seventeen miles per second -- makes of it a vast electro-generating
body, a huge machine, a mighty prototype of the puny-man-made dynamo,
which, at best, is but a feeble imitation of nature's original.
The valleys of this inner Atlantis Continent, bordering the upper waters
of the farthest north are in season covered with the most magnificent
and luxuriant flowers. Not hundreds and thousands, but millions, of
acres, from which the pollen or blossoms are carried far away in almost
every direction by the earth's spiral gyrations and the agitation of
the wind resulting therefrom, and it is these blossoms or pollen from
the vast floral meadows "within" that produce the colored snows of the
Arctic regions that have so mystified the northern explorers.25
25Kane, vol. I, page 44, says: "We passed the 'crimson
cliffs' of Sir John Ross in the forenoon of August 5th. The patches
of red snow from which they derive their name could be seen clearly
at the distance of ten miles from the coast."
La Chambre, in an account of Andree's balloon expedition, on page
144, says: "On the isle of Amsterdam the snow is tinted with red for
a considerable distance, and the savants are collecting it to examine
it microscopically. It presents, in fact, certain peculiarities; it
is thought that it contains very small plants. Scoreby, the famous whaler,
had already remarked this."
Beyond question, this new land "within" is the home, the cradle, of
the human race, and viewed from the standpoint of the discoveries made
by us, must of necessity have a most important bearing on all physical,
paleontological, archaeological, philological, and mythological theories
of antiquity.
The same idea of going back to the land of mystery -- to the very beginning
-- to the origin of man -- is found in Egyptian traditions of the earlier
terrestrial regions of the gods, heroes and men, from the historical
fragments of Manetho, fully verified by the historical records taken
from the more recent excavations of Pompeii as well as traditions of
the North American Indians.
***
It is now one hour past midnight - the new year of 1908 is here, and
this is the third day thereof, and having at last finished the record
of my strange travels and adventures I wish given to the world, I am
ready, and even longing, for the peaceful rest which I am sure will
follow life's trials and vicissitudes. I am old in years, and ripe both
with adventures and sorrows, yet rich with the few friends I have cemented
to me in my struggles to lead a just and upright life. Like a story
that is well-nigh told, my life is ebbing away. The presentiment is
strong within me that I shall not live to see the rising of another
sun. Thus do I conclude my message.
Olaf Jansen.