Monday, July 13, 2015

Egyptian Pyramids and Tesla's Tower of Power

Tesla's Tower of Power - New York

     In 1905 a team of construction workers in the small village of Shoreham, New York, began the construction of what was to be known as the Wardenclyffe Tower (also know as Tesla's Tower of Power). Spanning only a few years, the work crew mangaged to build this 187-foot-tall tower shown in the image above.
 
     The project was conceieved and overseen by Nikola Tesla, who was in turn inspired by the pyramid builders of Egypt, with the pyramids also claimed to be monuments for wireless electronic.
 
 
Nikola Tesla (July 10, 1856 – January 7, 1943)
      The top portion of the tower is a fifty-five ton dome of conductive metals with a 300 foot deep iron root system below the the surface of the ground. Tesla says, "In this system that I have invented, it is necessary for the machine to get a grip of the earth," he explained, "otherwise it cannot shake the earth. It has to have a grip… so that the whole of this globe can quiver."

     Tesla intended to transmit messages, telephony and even facsimile images across the Atlantic to England and to ships at sea based on his theories of using the Earth to conduct the signals.
 
     His decision to scale up the facility and add his ideas of wireless power transmission to better compete with Guglielmo Marconi's radio based telegraph system was met with the project's primary backer, financier J. P. Morgan, refusing to fund the changes. Additional investment could not be found and the project was abandoned in 1906 and never became operational.
 
 
  


Telluric Currents: How Might the Egyptians Have Utilized Them

     Telluric currents are phenomena observed in the Earth's crust and mantle. In September 1862, an experiment to specifically address Earth currents was carried out in the Munich Alps. (Lamont, JV)

     As far back as the early Egyptians in circa 3,000 BC, however, the pyramid builders could have produced energy using the pyramids to capture the earth's tulluric currents. Once the pyramid generated its own electrical currrent, it could further increase the voltage by tying into the natural electrical grid of the planet using these Tulluric currents, creating a wireless type connection to
facilitate output at a great distance.

 
Telluric Energy Lines Criss-Crossing the Planet with Representation of Pyramid Emitting Energy

     The currents are primarily geomagnetically induced currents, which are induced by changes in the outer part of the Earth's magnetic field, which are usually caused by interactions between the solar wind and the magnetosphere or solar radiation effects on the ionosphere.

     Telluric currents flow in the surface layers of the earth. The electric potential on the Earth's surface can be measured at different points, enabling the calculation of the magnitudes and directions of the telluric currents and hence the Earth's conductance.

     These currents are known to have diurnal characteristics wherein the general direction of flow is towards the sun. Telluric currents continuously move between the sunlit and shadowed sides of the earth, toward the equator on the side of the earth facing the sun (that is, during the day), and toward the poles on the night side of the planet.

     In industrial prospecting activity that uses the telluric current method, electrodes are properly located on the ground to sense the voltage difference between locations caused by the oscillatory telluric currents. It is recognized that a low frequency window (LFW) exists when telluric currents pass through the earth's substrata. In the frequencies of the LFW, the earth acts as a conductor.

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(Adapted from article written by Alan Bellows - July 10, 2007)
 
 
 
Other Resources:
 
Nikola Tesla & The Great Pyramid
 
 
 
 

Sunday, July 12, 2015

Biggest ocean desalination plant in California nears completion


Reverse osmosis filters are seen as construction continues on the
Western Hemisphere's largest seawater desalination plant in Carlsbad, California.
The Economic Times - April 15, 2015

California's 3-year-old drought has thrust seawater desalination into the spotlight as San Diego County, Santa Barbara and other cities push ahead with treatment plants that will soon turn the Pacific Ocean into a source of drinking water.

Desalination has emerged as a newly promising technology in California in the face of a record dry spell that has forced tough new conservation measures, depleted reservoirs and raised the costs of importing fresh water from elsewhere.

Project worth $1 billion

The biggest ocean desalination plant in the Western Hemisphere, a $1 billion project under construction since 2012 on a coastal lagoon in the California city of Carlsbad, is nearly completed.
The plant is due to open in November, delivering up to 50 million gallons of water a day to San Diego County.

This is enough to supply roughly 112,000 households, or about 10 per cent of the county's drinking water needs, according to Poseidon Resources, the Connecticut-based company behind the facility.

Poseidon has a second seawater desalting project of similar size

Poseidon has a second seawater desalting project of similar size under development in Huntington Beach, south of Los Angeles, and is seeking a final permit to begin construction next year.

Expensive

Experts warn that converting seawater to drinking supplies remains an expensive, energy-intensive enterprise that has had mixed success in places like Australia and Florida.

Another 15 to 17 seawater desalting plants are in the design or planning phase around the state.

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