Levitating water?
Aug. 28th, 2011 02:22 pmOkay, so a friend finds a link to this article, talking about a particular kind of basin found in Egypt, ancient limestone basins clearly manufactured for a specific purpose. Okay, reasonable enough. But the author seems to think these are made of artificial limestone, for levitating...something. And so we get stuff like this:
The high-resonance form of hydrogen is called protium, being the lightest hydrogen isotope, known for its powerful rejuvenative effects, in stark contrast to the cellular aging induced by heavy water. The levitation of water by solar-driven infrasound resonance allows separation of lighter protium water molecules from the heavier isotopes of deuterium and tritium (above).
Wait, what? Rejuvination? Infrasound? Levitation of water? Solar power? (And deuteurium and tritium are only 0.015% of all hydrogen anyway.) I didn't even include the stuff about pizoelectricity. Frankly, I'm lost. I'm pretty sure the author is trying to say something, and he's got a better command of English than the Time Cube guy, but I don't follow the argument and I'm going to quietly sneak out of the room while nobody is looking.
It has some pretty pictures of ruins, though.
The high-resonance form of hydrogen is called protium, being the lightest hydrogen isotope, known for its powerful rejuvenative effects, in stark contrast to the cellular aging induced by heavy water. The levitation of water by solar-driven infrasound resonance allows separation of lighter protium water molecules from the heavier isotopes of deuterium and tritium (above).
Wait, what? Rejuvination? Infrasound? Levitation of water? Solar power? (And deuteurium and tritium are only 0.015% of all hydrogen anyway.) I didn't even include the stuff about pizoelectricity. Frankly, I'm lost. I'm pretty sure the author is trying to say something, and he's got a better command of English than the Time Cube guy, but I don't follow the argument and I'm going to quietly sneak out of the room while nobody is looking.
It has some pretty pictures of ruins, though.