Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
According to Schauberger, the water's cycle from the earth to the atmosphere and back again is either completed as a full cycle, or remains a half cycle. The full cycle can only take place where there is the appropriate vegetation cover to allow the rain to penetrate deeply, and it will in turn encourage natural vegetation and conditions of water run off. In the full cycle, when water falls to earth as precipitation, it drains through the soil, sinking deeper and deeper through rapid cooling, until it reaches a level where the weight of the water mass above equals the pressure of the deeply drained water, the latter, warmed by the earth's heat, and as its specific weight falls, wants to rise. During heating the water is able to attract and bind metals and salts. In fact, the water has been partially converted to steam during heating, and comes into contact with carbon beneath the earth, causing the reaction C + H2O --> CO + H2; that means that the oxygen in the water separates from the hydrogen, and then the damp hydrogen gas forces its way towards the earth's surface with tremendous pressure .
Thus carbon dioxide is released from the deeper drainage basins. At the same time surrounding salts are dissolved and carried away with the gas to be deposited again in layers near the surface, which is kept cool by the 'refrigeration' effect of the vegetation. This is how a constant supply of nutrition is made available for vegetation, and deposited at root level.
Thus carbon dioxide is released from the deeper drainage basins. At the same time surrounding salts are dissolved and carried away with the gas to be deposited again in layers near the surface, which is kept cool by the 'refrigeration' effect of the vegetation. This is how a constant supply of nutrition is made available for vegetation, and deposited at root level.
Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
The Giza plateau in antiquity was vastly different in appearance to how it is in the present day. Archaeologists and geologists working in the region have found evidence, through patterns of erosion, fossilized plant and animal material, and artifacts, that the area some 8,000 years ago was once quite fertile and lush with vegetation. Water was abundant and underground aquifers are still, as evidenced by the difficulties Zahi Hawass and his team had in exploring the Osiris Shaft of the Great Pyramid in 1999 CE due to the high water table. Rainfall was plentiful in the region c. 15,000 BCE, and though it became less so in time, the area was still quite fertile at the time of the 4th Dynasty.
Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
Hydrogen (H) becomes active by cooling and combines with the passive oxygen (O) to produce a concentrated form of energy of lift and growth, ' biological magnetism '. This lifting power of diamagnetism operates in opposition to gravitation.
Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
THE MYSTERY ROOM
The subterranean chamber (6) is the largest and most unusual room of the Great Pyramid. This odd looking room is located 100’ below the base of the Great Pyramid and carved from the solid limestone bedrock of the plateau (see Figure 5). This large room is 27’ north to south and 56’ east to west. The entrance is near the floor at the northeast corner. The eastern half of the room averages 11’ to 13’ in height. The western half of the room is a 5 ½’ high step (see Figure 6). The step has a channel in the middle that leads to the western wall. This channel, the “step channel“, starts at floor level but tapers as it heads towards the back wall. On top of the step are two fins that run from the front of the step to the back wall. A third fin starts ½ way back on the step. All of the fins run east to west and reach up near the ceiling. On the main floor there is a {6’} wide square pit set diagonally some 5’ from the eastern wall. This pit drops 5 ½‘ to a step where the pit narrows to 4’ square. The total depth of the pit is about 11’ although Cavigula had drilled down another 30’ in the 1800’s.5 In the southeastern corner is the entrance to a tunnel that measures 29” by 31”. Dubbed the ”dead end” shaft, this tunnel runs 57’ due south where it ends in a vertical wall.
The subterranean chamber has confounded most pyramid researchers. The Orthodox camp essentially gave up trying to explain this room . They came up with the idea that the whole subterranean section was a giant mistake. Edward Kunkel, Chris Dunn, and Joe Parr gave alternate views. Kunkel was partially correct when he recognized that the chamber was part of a modified hydraulic ram pump . Dunn recognized that the chamber must be the location for the source of a pulse direct towards King’s chamber . Parr recognized that it was the location of a sound transmission .
The subterranean chamber (6) is the largest and most unusual room of the Great Pyramid. This odd looking room is located 100’ below the base of the Great Pyramid and carved from the solid limestone bedrock of the plateau (see Figure 5). This large room is 27’ north to south and 56’ east to west. The entrance is near the floor at the northeast corner. The eastern half of the room averages 11’ to 13’ in height. The western half of the room is a 5 ½’ high step (see Figure 6). The step has a channel in the middle that leads to the western wall. This channel, the “step channel“, starts at floor level but tapers as it heads towards the back wall. On top of the step are two fins that run from the front of the step to the back wall. A third fin starts ½ way back on the step. All of the fins run east to west and reach up near the ceiling. On the main floor there is a {6’} wide square pit set diagonally some 5’ from the eastern wall. This pit drops 5 ½‘ to a step where the pit narrows to 4’ square. The total depth of the pit is about 11’ although Cavigula had drilled down another 30’ in the 1800’s.5 In the southeastern corner is the entrance to a tunnel that measures 29” by 31”. Dubbed the ”dead end” shaft, this tunnel runs 57’ due south where it ends in a vertical wall.
The subterranean chamber has confounded most pyramid researchers. The Orthodox camp essentially gave up trying to explain this room . They came up with the idea that the whole subterranean section was a giant mistake. Edward Kunkel, Chris Dunn, and Joe Parr gave alternate views. Kunkel was partially correct when he recognized that the chamber was part of a modified hydraulic ram pump . Dunn recognized that the chamber must be the location for the source of a pulse direct towards King’s chamber . Parr recognized that it was the location of a sound transmission .
Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
Schauberger claimed that the water rose because it was so strongly charged with biological magnetism, negating gravity
Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
Interesting viewpoint, would be massive if true:
Should **Viktor's hypothesis that the Sun is
both dark and cold prove to be correct, it
would without doubt have far-reaching
implications for all human intellectual
endeavour, science, religion** , etc...
Should **Viktor's hypothesis that the Sun is
both dark and cold prove to be correct, it
would without doubt have far-reaching
implications for all human intellectual
endeavour, science, religion** , etc...
Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
Hydrogen, however, is in a category of its own, for Viktor viewed it as the carrier substance of both oxygen and carbone, often writing it down in the hieroglyphic form in fig. 5.1. If we look at the world from space this concept is quite factual, because we can see that our planet, composed as it is of carbones and fertilised by oxygen, is floating in the carrier ocean of the hydrogen gas filling all space.
Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
On Light and Other High Frequency Phenomena by Nikola Tesla 1893
The day when we shall know exactly what “electricity” is, will chronicle an event probably greater, more important than any other recorded in the history of the human race. The time will come when the comfort, the very existence, perhaps, or man will depend upon that wonderful agent. For our existence and comfort we require heat, light and mechanical power. How do we now get all these? We get them from fuel, we get them by consuming material. What will man do when the forests disappear, when the coal fields are exhausted? Only one thing according to our present knowledge will remain; that is, to transmit power at great distances. Men will go to the waterfalls, to the tides, which are the stores of an infinitesimal part of Nature’s immeasurable energy. There will they harness the energy and transmit the same to their settlements, to warm their homes by, to give them light, and to keep their obedient slaves, the machines, toiling. But how will they transmit this energy if not by electricity? Judge then, if the comfort, nay, the very existence, of man will not depend on electricity. I am aware that this view is not that of a practical engineer, but neither is it that of an illusionist, for it is certain, that power transmission, which at present is merely a stimulus to enterprise, will some day be a dire necessity.
The day when we shall know exactly what “electricity” is, will chronicle an event probably greater, more important than any other recorded in the history of the human race. The time will come when the comfort, the very existence, perhaps, or man will depend upon that wonderful agent. For our existence and comfort we require heat, light and mechanical power. How do we now get all these? We get them from fuel, we get them by consuming material. What will man do when the forests disappear, when the coal fields are exhausted? Only one thing according to our present knowledge will remain; that is, to transmit power at great distances. Men will go to the waterfalls, to the tides, which are the stores of an infinitesimal part of Nature’s immeasurable energy. There will they harness the energy and transmit the same to their settlements, to warm their homes by, to give them light, and to keep their obedient slaves, the machines, toiling. But how will they transmit this energy if not by electricity? Judge then, if the comfort, nay, the very existence, of man will not depend on electricity. I am aware that this view is not that of a practical engineer, but neither is it that of an illusionist, for it is certain, that power transmission, which at present is merely a stimulus to enterprise, will some day be a dire necessity.