Shenton, we offer this NASA/NOAA GOES-13 satellite image of our planet as it looked on March 2, 2010. And I don't think that burden of proof has been met yet." "To look around, the world does appear to be flat, so I think it is incumbent on others to prove decisively that it isn't. "I haven't taken this position just to be difficult," Shenton told The Guardian last year. Though Shenton believes in evolution and global warming, he and his hundreds, if not thousands, of followers worldwide also believe that the Earth is a disc that you can fall off of. The Flat Earth Society is an active organization currently led by a Virginian man named Daniel Shenton. But at the time people actually believed this stuff!" "A lot of stuff like this got ignored and swept into history's wastebasket. "These people truly believed that the Earth is not a globe!" Homuth said. Think of the speed!" Yeah right, Ferguson seems to have been implying. The map also has a picture of a man holding onto the Earth for dear life, with an inscription that reads: "These men are flying on the globe at a rate of 65,000 miles per hour around the sun, and 1,042 miles per hour around the center of the earth (in their minds). "By 1893, most people knew about horizons so he had to come up with some way to explain that." "It's pretty clever because it explains the Columbus phenomenon, where you see ships coming in over the horizon and gradually the mast gets taller and taller until you can see the ship," Bingham said. "What makes his flat Earth different from other theories is his theory holds that the Earth is imprinted with an 'inverse toroid.'" If you were to take a donut and press it into wet cement and then remove the donut, Bingham explained, the rounded impression it left in the cement would be what is known in mathematics as an inverse toroid. Typical of flat Earths, Ferguson's Earth is a rectangular slab, the four corners of which are each guarded by an angel. "Ferguson was trying to make an updated version of the flat Earth theory to fit the biblical description of the Earth with known facts," Bingham said. James Bingham, chairman of the museum's board of directors, told us what he knows about it. The only other copy is housed in the Pioneer Historical Museum in Hot Springs. So we thought we'd send it to the Library of Congress," Homuth told Life's Little Mysteries, a sister site to LiveScience. I don't want it to fall into the hands of relatives, for God's sake! And I don't particularly want to sell it. He got the map from his eighth grade history teacher in Fargo, N.D., who got it from his grandfather, who lived in Hot Springs, S.D. It's printed on tissue paper and hand-colored with watercolors," Homuth said. Don Homuth of Salem, Ore., just donated one of two intact copies of the map to the Library of Congress. The map accompanied a 92-page lecture that Ferguson - referring to himself as a "professor" - delivered in town after town, traveling far and wide to share his theory of geography, highlighted by his belief that the Earth was flat.įerguson's map represents the Earth as a giant, rectangular slab with a dimpled upper surface. In 1893, Orlando Ferguson, a real estate developer based in South Dakota, drew a map of the Earth that combined biblical and scientific knowledge in a unique way.
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