Subject: Ascension Earth 2012
Plants Will Not Grow Near Wi-Fi Routers, Experiment Finds
Richard C. Hoagland Provides Incredible Evidence that Phobos is an Ancient
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Wi-Fi Routers, Experiment Finds
Posted: 17 Dec 2013 10:54 PM PST
SpiritfoodsnaturalnewsIt's not difficult to understand
the appeal of Wi-Fi. This revolutionary technology, which has been commercially
available since 1999, eliminates cabling and wiring for computers, reduces
cellular usage charges and allows us to connect to the Internet from anywhere
with a signal. Despite these benefits, however, studies continue to show that
the radiation generated by wireless routers is negatively affecting our health.
In fact, the British activist website Stop Smart Meters recently published a
list of 34 scientific studies demonstrating the adverse biological effects of
Wi-Fi exposure, including studies linking it to headaches, reduced sperm count
and oxidative stress. The latest research into the dangers of Wi-Fi, though,
comes from a surprisingly humble source: Five ninth grade female students from
Denmark, whose science experiment revealed that wireless radiation is equally
as devastating to plants. Undeniable
results The experiment began when the five students realized that they had
difficulty concentrating in school if they slept near their mobile phones the
previous night. Intrigued by this phenomenon, the students endeavored to study
the effects of cellphone radiation on humans. Unfortunately, their school
prevented them from pursuing this experiment due to a lack of resources, so the
students decided to test the effects of Wi-Fi radiation (comparable in strength
to cellphone radiation) on a plant instead.The girls placed six trays of
Lepidium sativum seeds (a garden cress grown commercially throughout Europe) in
a room without radiation, and an equal amount in a room next to two Wi-Fi
routers. Over a 12-day period, they observed, measured, weighed and
photographed the results. Even before the 12th day arrived, however, the end
results were obvious: The cress seeds placed near the routers either hadn't
grown or were completely dead, while the seeds placed in the radiation-free
room had blossomed into healthy plants. The experiment earned the five students
top honors in a regional science competition. Moreover, according to a teacher
at their school, Kim Horsevad, a professor of neuroscience at the Karolinska
Institute in Sweden was so impressed with the experiment that he is interested
in repeating it in a controlled scientific environment. Michael Ravensthorpe is
an independent writer whose research interests include nutrition, alternative
medicine, and bushcraft. He is the creator of the website through which
he promotes the world's healthiest foods. Source:
Richard C. Hoagland Provides Incredible Evidence that
Phobos is an Ancient Spacecraft
Posted: 17 Dec 2013 10:48 PM PST
Phobos
The startling scientific evidence backing up this
"coming chain of events," begins with the best high-resolution
imaging of Phobos ever achieved ... taken March 7, 2010. Here (below) is the
geometry of that recent Mars Express close-encounter with Phobos ... and the
set-up for our first Enterprise Mission imaging enhancement (see full
description later in this Report ...) of one of these new ESA images, from the
most recent Mars Express Phobos Closest fly-by.
It is a close-up of the north (and "orbit-facing" hemisphere)
of Phobos -- which travels around Mars in what is technically termed "a
tidally-locked orbit" (meaning, "the same side always facing 'orbital
front'"). In this graphic (below), that "front-facing side" of
hamburger-shaped "Phobos" is also facing the spacecraft camera ... as
it was looking down on the "northern hemisphere" of Phobos, at about
a 30-degree angle, on the March 7th pass ....
The original Mars
Express image itself (from which this enhanced version has been produced - below)
was taken from a distance of approximately 60 miles; the smallest objects
discernable in the full image (when properly enlarged) are about 15 feet
across-- On a 15-mile-wide "moon" .....
Note all
the redundant, right-angle geometry ... parallel "layering" ... and
sheer non-random Organization! Here (below) are the "global"
coordinates and orbital vector for this ESA Phobos image -- as prepared by
Enterprise Associate, Greg Ahrens ....
And this (below)
is a more distant view -- acquired from an earlier Mars Express fly-by image
series; the illuminating sun angle is opposite our previous images -- here,
coming from the right. Notice in all
these images that "the front" -- the side of Pho
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