You're welcome...=)keeha wrote:I'm convinced Total Science -thanks.
For more information see here.
I recall that someone somewhere had determined that the earth was akin to that geode. I will read up on this. He was likely hitting the nail on the head. Thanks!Brigit Bara wrote:Krackonis, interesting geode. It brought to mind that Carey found a "hierarchy of polygons into which the earth's crust is broken." I never got to read the book, though.
http://www.grisda.org/origins/12041.htm
'In response to the question, "What causes the expansion of the earth?" Carey's first response is that he does not know. Suggested possibilities are:
a. phase changes in the earth core (pp. 124, 450).
b. secular decrease in the universal gravitational constant (p. 451).
c. secular change in e/m (charge/mass of electron) (p. 457).'
My theory is the same for Geodes and Concretions. I personally also feel that the "sun" and all stars are nothing more than balls of regular (likely metallic) rock, appearing to be light weight due to high charge. The center of SOME of these 'geodes in space' are hollow. The moon rang for hours after the Apollo lander blasted off, likely hollow (and widely so), Mercury likely has an small, offset, opening in it which plasma is twisting in a double vortex as it reacts to the ions flowing past and through it, generating a small magnetic field as it does so.StevenO wrote:Here is an explanation I like about why planets grow:
1) The planets' cores consists of white-dwarf debris (white dwarves expand back to regular size over a long period)
2) The earth collects at least 1000 tons of interstellar material/day
3) Water is a wasteproduct of bacteria, so we are lucky that the earth expands otherwise we would all be fishies
http://www.reciprocalsystem.com/isus/re ... hcore.html
That is very interesting. Does anyone have a link or a source for any measurements of this?The main thing i wanted to point out was that the video claims the earths rotation slows down during a solar eclipse. I think that this really supports the EU theory.... what do you think?
heres the original link:nick c wrote: ps...I get a "404 not found" for the English translation link
Personally I like Konstantin Meyl, the pity is that because of the German language there is a major barrier for only-english speaking peoplenate322 wrote:Hi all this is my first post here. I registered so i could get some feed back on the German video i watched even though i don't speak German. [url2=http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid ... erde&hl=en]The video was called And Yet It Moves - A Movie About an Expanding Earth[/url2], or "Und sie bewegt sich doch! - Ein Film uber die wachsende Erde" in German. [url2=http://translate.google.com/translate?h ... start%3D10]I found a page that explains the video and translated it into English.[/url2]
The main thing i wanted to point out was that the video claims the earths rotation slows down during a solar eclipse. I think that this really supports the EU theory.... what do you think?
This is known as the Allais effect after Frenchman Maurice Allais. In 1954 while experimenting with a pendulum he noted anomalous precession of the plane of oscillation of a pendulum during a solar eclipse which appeared to violate the standard theory of Gravity. The experiment has been repeated since several time and the each time the anomaly has been detected to various degrees. It has largely been denied by mainstream science but there are those who still want to investigate the anomaly.nate322 wrote:The main thing i wanted to point out was that the video claims the earths rotation slows down during a solar eclipse. I think that this really supports the EU theory.... what do you think?
Titan's temporary magnetic fieldOne of the sticking point of the Expanding Earth theory according to its opponents is it doesn't explain why the earth just started to expand 250 mil years ago (the expansion of the sea floor can be tracked back in geologic time sequence to around 250 mil years ago). Why was the Earth not expanding in the billions of years before that. This could never be explained successfully.
I started a thread on the Allais effect here:Komorikid wrote:This is known as the Allais effect after Frenchman Maurice Allais. In 1954 while experimenting with a pendulum he noted anomalous precession of the plane of oscillation of a pendulum during a solar eclipse which appeared to violate the standard theory of Gravity.
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