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Post by acidohm on Jul 13, 2019 22:31:16 GMT
Just a thought, and going off on a bit of a tangent.... There's evidence in ancient monuments that those who built these understood the precession of the globe and the figures required to calculate this. Makes we wonder if we're missing information relating to sun activity. It would be logical that a people who could potentially calculate a 24,000 year cycle might deem a 350 year or so one which affected their harvests etc 🤔 Ancient archaeology is a science where there is a consensus on established fact and contrary evidence is sneered upon 🤷♂️ The book Forbidden Archeology (as I said sometime ago, may have been on the 'old board') attacks currently accepted archaeology in the same way that currently accepted climate 'science' is attacked. There are the same confirmation biases and clique-doms, and disallowing dissenting publications by the archaeological thought police. The claim is made that advanced tools were found below some very old geological layers and that humans have been around considerably longer than the accepted/enforced 'out of Africa' narrative would have people believe. Link to Amazon BooksDifference between archaeology and climatology...one has all the answers in the past, the other the future. The nitwits and rows in the middle are identicle.
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Post by acidohm on Jul 13, 2019 22:34:48 GMT
The book Forbidden Archeology (as I said sometime ago, may have been on the 'old board') attacks currently accepted archaeology in the same way that currently accepted climate 'science' is attacked. There are the same confirmation biases and clique-doms, and disallowing dissenting publications by the archaeological thought police. The claim is made that advanced tools were found below some very old geological layers and that humans have been around considerably longer than the accepted/enforced 'out of Africa' narrative would have people believe. Link to Amazon BooksDifference between archaeology and climatology...one has all the answers in the past, the other the future. The nitwits and rows in the middle are identicle. On another side note, i was chatting to a religious studies professeur about publishing papers....she said "well you have to say the right thing to please the right people or your paper wont get published" No way, i said, i cant believe something like that would happen 🙄
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Post by missouriboy on Jul 13, 2019 23:43:44 GMT
Difference between archaeology and climatology...one has all the answers in the past, the other the future. The nitwits and rows in the middle are identicle. On another side note, i was chatting to a religious studies professeur about publishing papers....she said "well you have to say the right thing to please the right people or your paper wont get published" No way, i said, i cant believe something like that would happen 🙄 The Vicars of Christ can be notoriously picky if you don't cough up with some indulgences. Mullahs on the other hand will just drown you like a rat in a cage.
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Post by missouriboy on Jul 15, 2019 11:24:58 GMT
The effects of geomagnetic activity fluctuations on various Earth lifeforms has been mentioned before. I know this is the Express ... but even tabloids may stumble upon some oddities related to the greater effects of "the Settled Science". Is Geomagnetic Disorder Syndrome (GDS) on the verge of being recognized as a reality? Meanwhile the dazed and increasingly agitated lifeforms of planet Earth continue to surprise. California earthquake: Why are the BEES dying in DEATH VALLEY after 7.1 magnitude quake?
www.express.co.uk/news/world/1150383/california-earthquake-7-1-magnitude-dead-bees-video-explained-khalil-underwoodDid the earthquake cause the bees to die?
The honest answer is that scientists do not really know for sure.
There have been plenty of accounts of animals and insects acting strangely before an earthquake.
One Taiwan study found two major earthquakes in 1999 and 2002 had a catastrophic even on insect communities, resulting in “large declines in total individual number but also total species number of insects”.
Insects living underground or in underwater sediments were most affected, according to the three-year study examining the 7.3-magnitude and 6.8-magnitude quakes.
The United States Geological Survey (USGS) has previously said it is “possible” a “seismic-escape response” may have evolved from animals’ natural instincts to escape predators.
While acknowledging much more research needs to be done, the USGS website says: “An instinctive response following a P-wave seconds before a larger S wave is not a “huge leap”, so to speak, but what about other precursors that may occur days or weeks before an earthquake that we don’t yet know about?
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Post by nautonnier on Jul 15, 2019 11:47:41 GMT
The effects of geomagnetic activity fluctuations on various Earth lifeforms has been mentioned before. I know this is the Express ... but even tabloids may stumble upon some oddities related to the greater effects of "the Settled Science". Is Geomagnetic Disorder Syndrome (GDS) on the verge of being recognized as a reality? Meanwhile the dazed and increasingly agitated lifeforms of planet Earth continue to surprise. California earthquake: Why are the BEES dying in DEATH VALLEY after 7.1 magnitude quake?
www.express.co.uk/news/world/1150383/california-earthquake-7-1-magnitude-dead-bees-video-explained-khalil-underwoodDid the earthquake cause the bees to die?
The honest answer is that scientists do not really know for sure.
There have been plenty of accounts of animals and insects acting strangely before an earthquake.
One Taiwan study found two major earthquakes in 1999 and 2002 had a catastrophic even on insect communities, resulting in “large declines in total individual number but also total species number of insects”.
Insects living underground or in underwater sediments were most affected, according to the three-year study examining the 7.3-magnitude and 6.8-magnitude quakes.
The United States Geological Survey (USGS) has previously said it is “possible” a “seismic-escape response” may have evolved from animals’ natural instincts to escape predators.
While acknowledging much more research needs to be done, the USGS website says: “An instinctive response following a P-wave seconds before a larger S wave is not a “huge leap”, so to speak, but what about other precursors that may occur days or weeks before an earthquake that we don’t yet know about?This story was picked up elsewhere too.... "Watch: Honey Bees Drop Dead Following California Earthquake
If the dwindling bee population across the US wasn't enough, new footage uploaded onto social media shows, in one instance, thousands of bees dropping dead upon a series of earthquakes that shook California last week, reported Sputnik.
Southern California was hit by two earthquakes late last week: a 6.4 magnitude quake on Thursday, accompanied by a 7.1 magnitude earthquake Friday evening, both with an epicenter near the Mojave Desert.
On Saturday morning, blogger Khalil Underwood from California uploaded the footage onto Twitter of thousands of dying bees spread across his driveway following the massive quakes."www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-07-09/caught-camera-honey-bees-drop-dead-following-california-earthquake
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Post by acidohm on Jul 15, 2019 19:41:27 GMT
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Post by missouriboy on Jul 26, 2019 7:46:34 GMT
Just updated my Solar Indices Charts. SC24 keeps chugging along. Nine months left if it is as long as SC12 (the first cycle of the 1880s downturn) and SC20 (the singleton low cycle of the 1970s). For the same number of SC months, SC24 has had only 86% of SC12 flux and 53% of the number of sunspots ... but 84% of the number of spotless days. The difference in the number of sunspots is curious. THEY continue to tell us that our sun has little effect on our weather and climate. I will point my finger at that huge spike in spotless days on my second chart, during late 1886 and early 1887. That was the winter of "The 1887 Blizzard That Changed the American Frontier Forever" ... www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/1887-blizzard-changed-american-frontier-forever-1-180953852/ From November to April there accumulated 103 spotless days. November to April of 2018-19 accumulated 106. The next winter brought the Great Blizzard of 1888. The storm, referred to as the Great White Hurricane, paralyzed the East Coast from the Chesapeake Bay to Maine, as well as the Atlantic provinces of Canada.(Wikipedia) At the start (1899) of the next solar cycle (SC13) minimum, the Mississippi River froze its entire length down to the Gulf of Mexico. And SC13 was slightly larger than SC12. SC20 was nowhere close to either SC12 or SC24, but it had many notorious winters ... and set off a wave of ice age prophets. 1899 was the year when the Mississippi River froze its entire length down to the Gulf of Mexico. In fact, some ice even flowed into the Gulf. In places like Cairo, Illinois the thickness of the ice was 13 inches. Ice two inches thick reached New Orleans and ice an inch thick was observed at the mouth of the river.
Four consecutive days during the winter of 1899 brought extreme harsh conditions to North America. Known as “The Great Cold Wave”, many record-setting low temperatures which were set still hold to this day in many cities.
On February 14, Tallahassee, Florida saw temperatures as cold as -2°F (-18.9° C). This is still the coldest temperature ever recorded in Florida. Other locations that saw rare low temperatures include Dallas, Texas at -10°F (-23.3° C), Kansas City, Missouri at -22°F (-30° C), and Scottsbluff, Nebraska at -45°F (-42.8° C). All records which still stand.
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Post by nautonnier on Aug 4, 2019 7:31:34 GMT
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Post by nautonnier on Aug 11, 2019 19:43:30 GMT
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Post by missouriboy on Aug 19, 2019 14:24:39 GMT
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Post by Ratty on Aug 19, 2019 23:19:04 GMT
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Post by nemesis on Aug 20, 2019 15:02:40 GMT
Anecdotal evidence; An ex work colleague told me her brother was a top surgeon at a London hospital and who claimed he had witnessed a vast increase in tumours in the brain area and clothing pocket areas where people keep their mobile phones - starting around the time that mobile phones became commonplace.
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Post by Ratty on Aug 21, 2019 1:58:01 GMT
Anecdotal evidence; An ex work colleague told me her brother was a top surgeon at a London hospital and who claimed he had witnessed a vast increase in tumours in the brain area and clothing pocket areas where people keep their mobile phones - starting around the time that mobile phones became commonplace. Anecdote: My first mobile phone was an NEC 'half brick' with an external clip-on battery circa 1994. The battery was about the size of a 20-pack of cigarettes. It looked something like this: After I'd had the phone a while, I noticed a nauseous feeling when using the phone; it happened every time I put the phone to my head so I used it as little as possible. Later in the '90s, I used Nokias, often for very long conversations doing application & system support ..... mostly with, sometimes without an earpiece. Very occasionally, I felt a little nauseous with the phone to my ear. Psychological maybe? Modern phones don't seem to worry me but I rarely use the phone for long conversations; current phone is mainly used for "Where are you now" or "Meet you at the car" calls to Mrs Ratty in shopping centres. Lots of info on research: National Cancer Institute: Cell Phones and Cancer RiskCouple of excerpts: In 2018, the ACS issued a statement on the draft NTP reportsExit Disclaimer noting that the findings were still inconclusive, and that, so far, a higher cancer risk in people has not been seen, but that people who are concerned should wear an earpiece when using a cell phone.
The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) states that the weight of the current scientific evidence has not conclusively linked cell phone use with any adverse health problems, but more research is needed. Note the compulsory wording for all fields of research. The most consistent health risk associated with cell phone use is distracted driving and vehicle accidents (45, 46).
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Post by duwayne on Sept 6, 2019 14:13:40 GMT
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Post by missouriboy on Sept 6, 2019 17:35:14 GMT
I can almost hear the intra-agency management meetings that went on before that release. Bureaucratic hedging on a monumental scale.
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