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In 1982, The Jupiter Effect did not destroy the Earth as promised

On this day in 1982, a poorly predicted set of catastrophes failed to materialize — but only after eight years of book sales funding two young authors. The Wikipedia entry for The Jupiter Effect is rather brutal:

The Jupiter Effect is a 1974 book by John Gribbin and Stephen Plagemann, in which the authors predicted that an alignment of the planets of the Solar System would create a number of catastrophes, including a great earthquake on the San Andreas Fault, on March 10, 1982.

Especially this part:

The book became a best-seller. The predicted catastrophes did not occur.

In reality, every planet in our solar system aligning on a single side of the Sun was hardly a surprise to astronomers. Better yet, the same solar system event occurred some 854 years prior without incident in the year 1128.

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When predictions from the 1974 book didn’t pan out in 1982, the authors regrouped and published a follow up book called Beyond the Jupiter Effect, in which they admitted their predictions didn’t occur while refining their hypothesis.

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