From Geryl's site. It's supposed to be his evidence of "at least 3 pole shifts in the last 100,000 years"
"In his book "The Path of the Pole", Professor Charles Hapgood writes:
"I have found evidence of three different positions of the North Pole in recent time. During the last glaciation of the North America, the pole appears to have stood in Hudson Bay, approximately in Latitude 60 degrees North and Longitude 83 degrees West. It seems to have shifted to its present site in the middle of the Arctic Ocean about 12,000 years ago.
The radioactive dating methods further suggest that the pole came to Hudson Bay about 50,000 years ago, having been located before that time in the Greenland Sea, approximately in Latitude 73 degrees North an Longitude 10 degrees East. Thirty thousand years earlier the pole may have been in the Yukon District of Canada."
If the North Pole changes, the South Pole changes also. Hapgood writes the following:
"Powerful confirmation of another of the corollaries of a pole located in Hudson Bay comes from Antarctica. With a North Pole at 60 degrees North Latitude and 83 degrees West Longitude, the corresponding South Pole would have been located at 60 degrees South and 97 degrees East in the ocean off the Mac-Roberston Coast of Queen Maud Land, Antarctica. This would place the South Pole about seven times farther away from the head of the Ross sea in Antarctica than it is now (see the figure). We should expect, then, that the Ross Sea would not have been glaciated at that time.
We have confirmation of precisely this fact…" "