Académique Documents
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Duration in years
(rough approximation)
Began (years
before present)
Primordial
{ Laurentian
{ Cambrian
{ Silurian
}
}
}
171,200,000
320,000,000
Primary
{ Devonian
{ Coal
{ Permian
}
}
}
103,040,000
148,800,000
{ Triassic
}
Secondary { Jurassic
}
{ Cretaceous }
36,800,000
45,760,000
Tertiary
Quaternary
{ Eocene
{ Miocene
{ Pliocene
}
}
}
7,360,000
(probably in excess)
8,960,000
1,600,000
(probably in excess)
1,600,000
HPB comments: 'Such estimates harmonise with the statements of Esoteric Ethnology
in almost every particular.'
The date of 320 million years refers only to the present, fourth round of the earth's
evolution: 'sedimentation began in this Round approximately over 320 million years
ago', but 'even a greater time elapsed during the preparation of this globe for the Fourth
Round previous to stratification' (SD 2:715fn). (Sedimentation is the formation of rocks
by the accumulation and consolidation of mineral and organic fragments that have been
deposited by water, ice, or wind.)
G. de Purucker states: 'Our records show that it is some 320,000,000 years since
sedimentation began on this globe in this Fourth Round, nor does this long lapse of time
fully include the evolution of the three Kingdoms of the Elementals which preceded the
mineral activities beginning such sedimentation . . .' He adds that the first human rootrace did not begin until after the awakenment from their obscuration of the mineral,
vegetable, and animal kingdoms (except the higher mammals, which in the fourth round
followed man). (The Esoteric Tradition, 323, 325; Dialogues of G. de Purucker, 3:181-2)
Purucker also says: 'When the Masters or H.P.B. speak of the 320 million years since
sedimentation on our earth took place, they refer to the beginning of this Round on
Globe A; and when the impulse of the three elemental kingdoms, followed by the
mineral kingdom, reached our earth, then not only sedimentation but volcanic action
began' (Studies in Occult Philosophy, 288, 422).
These quotations could be interpreted to mean that geological activity began on globe D
at virtually the same time as on globe A. But if 320 million years is just an approximate,
rounded figure, the two events could be separated by millions of years. Indeed,
Purucker also says that sedimentation began on globe D between 300 and 320 million
years ago (Dialogues, 3:181).
HPB says that the lengths of the Tertiary and Quaternary as given in the above table are
'probably in excess'. This is also implied by her statement that only if the Quaternary
period is allowed 1,500,000 years does our fifth root-race belong to it (SD 2:715).
Another indication is provided by HPB's comments on the submergence of the islands
of Ruta and (part of) Daitya (see SD 1:650-1; GdeP, Studies in Occult Philosophy, 19,
24). The date most commonly given for this event is 850,000 years ago, another being
869,000 years ago (SD 2:147). HPB writes:
The Tertiary Atlantean part-cycle, from the 'apex of glory' of that Race in the
early Eocene to the great mid-Miocene cataclysm, would appear to have
lasted some 3 1/2 to four million years. If the duration of the Quaternary is
not rather (as seems likely) overestimated, the sinking of Ruta and Daitya
would be post-Tertiary. It is probable that the results here given allow
somewhat too long a period to both the Tertiary and Quaternary, as the Third
Race goes very far back into the Secondary Age. (SD 2:710)
A date of 850,000 years would fall in the mid-Quaternary according to the above table,
but HPB implies here that the sinking of Ruta actually occurred in the (late) Tertiary.
This is supported by several other statements:
The destruction of Ruta and Daitya occurred 850,000 years ago 'in the later Pliocene
times' (SD 2:314).
The main continent of Atlantis perished in Miocene times, but the 'Pliocene portions'
began gradually sinking 900,000 years ago, at the time of the first appearance of the
Aryan race; most of the later islander Atlanteans perished between 850,000 and
700,000 years ago, and the Aryans were 200,000 years old when the first great island
or continent was submerged (SD 2:395).
We can conclude that the transition from the Tertiary to the Quaternary (or from the
Pliocene to the Pleistocene epoch) took place between 900,000 and 700,000 years ago
rather than 1,600,000 years ago.
HPB writes: 'This event, the destruction of the famous island of Ruta and the smaller
one Daitya, which occurred 850,000 years ago in the later Pliocene times, must not be
confounded with the submersion of the main continent of Atlantis during the Miocene
period' (SD 2:314fn). But in the next sentence she says: 'Geologists cannot place the
Miocene only so short a way back as 850,000 years; whatever they do, it is several
million years ago that the main Atlantis perished.' She also states: 'The first of these
[family races] (the "Aryan-Asiatics") witnessed the doom of the last of the populations of
the "giant Atlanteans" who perished some 850,000 years ago (the Ruta and Daitya
Island-Continents) toward the close of the Miocene Age' (SD 2:433). The idea that the
Miocene ended only 850,000 years ago clashes with all other statements on this subject
and is most likely a blind.
Primordial
Cambrian
Silurian
Approx. thickness
of strata (ft)
35,000
28,000
23,000
320,000,000
250,000,000
194,000,000
Devonian
Carboniferous
Permian
19,000
18,000
15,000
148,000,000
110,000,000
74,000,000
Triassic
Jurassic
Cretaceous
8,000
6,000
4,000
44,000,000
28,000,000
16,000,000
Eocene
Miocene
Pliocene
2,000
1,000
500
7,870,000
3,670,000
1,870,000
500
870,000
Pleistocene etc.
(The thicknesses for Tertiary and Quaternary deposits have been rounded off by the
authors and therefore do not exactly correspond to the dates.)
According to these figures, the Eocene began 7,870,000 years ago and the Pleistocene
870,000 years ago, as compared with HPB's dates of 8,960,000 BP and 1,600,000 BP,
which she says are 'probably in excess'. The revised dates for the Tertiary are also in
good agreement with HPB's statement that the period from the apex of glory of the
Atlanteans in the early Eocene to the mid-Miocene cataclysm lasted some 3.5 to 4
million years (SD 2:710).
Primordial
Primary
Secondary
Tertiary
Quaternary
Lefvre/HPB
53.5
32.2
11.5
2.3
0.5
Modern science
34.5
26.1
29.1
9.9
0.4
Clearly use of the scientific percentages would lead to dates very different to those
given by HPB.
The table below shows the modern scientific dates for the geological periods alongside
theosophical dates. The scientific dates are taken from the 2013 International
Stratigraphic Chart (www.stratigraphy.org). Modern geological nomenclature differs in
some respects from that used by Blavatsky. For instance, the Eocene is now divided
into Paleocene, Eocene, and Oligocene, and the Ordovician period has been inserted
between the Cambrian and Silurian, and comprises part of both. The Cambrian is now
taken as the beginning of the Palaeozoic era. The Laurentian would fall into the
Precambrian era; in HPB's time 'Laurentian' denoted the 30,000 ft of rocks underlying
the Cambrian strata, but the term is no longer used in this sense. The scientific date for
the Laurentian has been calculated on the basis of the thicknesses of the Palaeozoic
and Laurentian strata given by Dick & Scott, and the duration of the Palaeozoic era
according to radiometric dating. In 2009 the International Union of Geological Sciences
redefined the Pleistocene to include part of the preceding Pliocene, moving the start
date back from 1.806 to 2.588 million years ago.
The theosophical figures are those given by Dick & Scott, with a few alterations and
additions. The duration of the Paleocene, Eocene, and Oligocene has been determined
by dividing up Dick & Scott's Eocene according to the maximum thickness of the
Palaeocene, Eocene, and Oligocene strata according to science (3658 m, 9144 m, and
7925 m respectively; R. Milton, The Facts of Life, 1992, plate 1). The duration of the
Cambrian, Ordovician, and Silurian has been determined using the same method
(thickness: 12,200 m, 12,200 m, and 10,400 m respectively). The beginning of the
Pleistocene has been moved back to include the same proportion of the Pliocene as in
the revised scientific scheme.
Major pulses of tectonic activity on earth are dated radiometrically at around 3000-2800,
2600-2500, 2200-2000, 1800-1600, 1200, 1000-900, and 600-500 million years ago.
The last of these corresponds to the onset of the fourth round.
Science
Began (years
BP)
Phanerozoic eon
Cenozoic era
Quaternary
period:
Holocene epoch
11,700
Theosophy
Began (years BP)
Pleistocene
Tertiary period:
Pliocene epoch
Miocene
Oligocene
Eocene
Palaeocene
2,588,000
1,090,000
5,333,000
23,030,000
33,900,000
56,000,000
66,000,000
1,870,000
3,670,000
5,280,000
7,130,000
7,870,000
Mesozoic era
Cretaceous
Jurassic
Triassic
145,000,000
201,300,000
252,170,000
16,000,000
28,000,000
44,000,000
Palaeozoic era
Permian
Carboniferous
Devonian
Silurian
Ordovician
Cambrian
298,900,000
358,900,000
419,200,000
443,400,000
485,400,000
541,000,000
74,000,000
110,000,000
148,000,000
179,000,000
214,000,000
250,000,000
(640,000,000)
1,000,000,000
1,600,000,000
2,500,000,000
Proterozoic eon
(Laurentian)
Neoproterozoic
Mesoproterozoic
Palaeoproterozoic
Archean eon
Neoarchean
2,800,000,000
Mesoarchean
Palaeoarchean
Eoarchean
3,200,000,000
3,600,000,000
4,000,000,000
Formation of earth
4,600,000,000
In Hindu philosophy, one lifetime of the earth is called a day of Brahm. It is said to last
4,320,000,000 years, and to be followed by a night of Brahm of equal length. A day of
Brahm, or kalpa, consists of 14 manvantaras of 306,720,000 years each, framed by 15
sandhis (a 'dawn' or 'twilight') of 1,728,000 years each. Each manvantara of
306,720,000 years consists of 71 mah-yugas of 4,320,000 years. Each mah-yuga
consists of a krita- (or satya-) yuga of 1,728,000 years, a tret-yuga of 1,296,000 years,
a dvpara-yuga of 864,000 years, and a kali-yuga of 432,000 years (SD 2:69-70).
We are currently in the kali-yuga of the twenty-eighth age (mah-yuga) of the seventh
manvantara (Isis Unveiled, 1:32). The kali-yuga began in February 3102 BC.* On the
basis of this information, the time that has elapsed since the beginning of the present
day of Brahm up to February 2000 can be calculated as follows:
6 manvantaras (1,840,320,000) + 7 sandhis (12,096,000) + 27 mah-yugas
(116,640,000) + 1 krita-yuga (1,728,000) + 1 tret-yuga (1,296,000) + 1 dvpara-yuga
(864,000) + the time from the beginning of kali-yuga (3102 + 2000 - 1)** =
1,972,949,101 years.
*According to the Brahmans of Tiruvarur, the astronomical epoch began at sunrise on 18
February 3102 BC, and the civil era began at about 2.27 am on 16 February 3102 BC (SD
1:661-2). The kali-yuga is also said to have begun at midnight between 17 and 18 February
3102 BC (SD 2:435; Blavatsky Collected Writings, 5:58; R.L. Thompson, Vedic Cosmography
and Astronomy, 1989, pp. 19-22).
**The date of 3102 BC for the start of the kali-yuga is a chronological date rather than an
astronomical date; in chronological dating there is no year zero between 1 BC and 1 AD,
whereas in astronomical dating there is. In calculating the time that has elapsed since the
beginning of kali-yuga and 2000, it is therefore necessary to subtract '1' in the above sum. (If
we used the equivalent astronomical date of 3101 BC, there would be no need for this.) That
3102 BC is a chronological date is indicated by J.S. Bailly in a calculation quoted in the SD
(1:666-7), and is confirmed by Subba Row (Esoteric Writings, pp. 55-6; BCW 5:261-2). Hence
the first 5000 years of the kali-yuga ended in February 1899 (= 5000 - 3102 + 1) and not in
1897/98, contrary to what is often stated (see Theos. Forum, Nov. 1937, p. 394).
The time that elapsed from the beginning of the present kalpa up to 1887 was therefore:
1,972,948,998 years. However, according to The Secret Doctrine (2:68), the Tamil
calendar called the Tiru-ganita Pachnga gives the following figures:
From the beginning of cosmic evolution up to 1887
1,955,884,687
years
man have taken that time (300 million years) to evolve, re-forming out of the cast-off materials
of the preceding Round, which, though very dense and physical in their own cycle, are
relatively ethereal as compared with the materiality of our present middle Round. At the
expiration of these 300 million years, Nature, on the way to the physical and material, down
the arc of descent, begins with mankind and works downwards, hardening or materialising
forms as it proceeds.' (SD 2:68fn; see also 2:52)
The three figures quoted in the SD that need to be reconciled are therefore:
1,955,884,687
1,664,500,987
1,960,852,987
We also need to explain why the first and third of these figures differ from the figure of
1,972,948,998 years calculated above for the time that has elapsed from the beginning
of the present kalpa to 1887.
The solution to the problem was first presented by Hans Malmstedt in an article entitled
'Our position in time on globe D' (The Theosophical Path, October 1933, pp. 226-35;
see also July 1931, pp. 63-9).
The last three digits of the three figures from the SD are: 687, 987, 987. Malmstedt says
that the number 687 must be wrong, and that the mistake may have arisen by a
compositor turning the 9 upside down to make a 6 while setting up the number 987.
HPB used the edition of the calendar for 1884-85 (SD 2:50-1); earlier editions confirm
that the 6 should be a 9 (see prajnaquest.fr; prajnaquest.fr).
A second minor error was made by both the writers of the Tamil calendar and Pandit
Sarasvat in calculating the time that has elapsed since the start of the kali-yuga. In the
SD (1:650) we are told: 'The Hindus date their Kali Yug from a great periodical
conjunction of the planets thirty-one centuries B.C.' The calculation was evidently done
in this way: 3100 + 1887 = 4987. But as explained above, it ought to be: 3100 + 1887 1 = 4986. (A similar mistake is made at SD 2:69.) The last three figures of each of the
three numbers above should therefore be: 986.
The third and final correction concerns the fact that the kali-yuga actually began in 3102
BC, not 3100 BC. The calculation is therefore: 3102 + 1887 -1 = 4988, so that the last
three digits of the three numbers should be 988.
If we now add another 113 years so that the numbers apply to the year 2000 rather than
1887, they become:
(1) 1,955,885,101 years
(2) 1,664,501,101 years
(3) 1,960,853,101 years
whereas the number we originally calculated was:
(4) 1,972,949,101 years.
All these numbers are essentially correct, as will now be explained.
Subtracting (1) from (4) gives: 17,064,000 years. What does this number represent?
The answer is to be found in the ancient Hindu astronomical text, the Srya-Siddhnta.
Chapter 1, verse 24 reads: '47,400 divine years passed while the God Brahm was
employed in creating animate and inanimate things, planets, stars, gods, demons, and
the rest.' Since one divine year equals 360 solar years, 47,400 divine years are equal to
17,064,000 solar years. In other words, the present kalpa on earth began with a period
of divine activity lasting 17,064,000 years, and only then did the period of what HPB
calls 'cosmic evolution' begin.*
*In the SD (2:68) HPB writes: 'The esoteric doctrine says that this "cosmic evolution" refers
only to our solar system; while exoteric Hinduism makes the figures refer, if we do not mistake,
to the whole Universal System.' However, in the very next footnote she states: 'The above
Brahmanical figures refer to the evolution beginning on Globe A [of the earth planetary chain],
and in the First Round.' (A similar statement is made at BCW 13:301.)
According to the SD, it took the astral mineral, vegetable, and animal kingdoms up to
man 300,000,000 years to evolve. However, the difference between numbers (1) and
(2) is only 291,384,000 years. The solution to this puzzle becomes apparent if we
subtract (2) from (4), for we then get: 308,448,000. This is exactly equal to one full
manvantara, i.e. one manvantara of 306,720,000 years plus one sandhi period of
1,728,000 years (or a dawn and twilight of 864,000 years each). In other words, the first
appearance of 'humanity' on earth occurred a whole manvantara of 308,448,000 years
after the beginning of the present kalpa, and therefore only 291,384,000 years after the
beginning of 'cosmic evolution' 17,064,000 years later.
Finally, subtracting (3) from (4) gives: 12,096,000 years. This is equal to 7 x 1,728,000.
In other words, the date given by Sarasvat is the time that has elapsed since the
beginning of the present kalpa, but it excludes the seven sandhis appearing before and
after each of the six manvantaras that have so far elapsed.
In conclusion, according to Hindu chronology, the time that has elapsed from the
beginning of the present day of Brahm up to February 2000 is 1,972,949,101 years
(but see Secret cycles, section 5, for a correction to this figure). It should be noted,
however, that the Hindu figures for a day of Brahm and its subdivisions, based on the
number 4320, are only approximations, albeit close ones, to the occult figures. HPB
comments: 'not one of the exact numbers will ever be given out, as they pertain to the
Mysteries of Initiations and to the Secrets of the occult influence of Numbers' (BCW
13:306).