The Source Field Investigations (43 page)

BOOK: The Source Field Investigations
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Dmitriev’s paper also presents evidence of complete dematerialization cases, where the matter is then blended together with other objects once it pops back over into space-time. An old, charred wooden board that was brittle and porous went through a wooden house wall without breaking—and an inch-and-a-half-thick gate frame was punctured by a piece of wood.
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I realized if these stories were true, there should be many more examples. I later found an official NOAA government Web site that collected eyewitness reports from a tornado outbreak in Grand Rapids, Michigan, on April 3, 1956. NOAA said that “in the interest of historical accuracy, these statements have not been edited for content, but are presented as they were submitted to the National Weather Service.” The reports included a living room window that was embedded with sand, but did not break. A farm machine had several leaky holes in the oil pan from pieces of straw that had shot through. Straw was found embedded into the brick wall of a house. A three-inch twig blended into a wall without breaking or cracking the twig or the wall. Blades of grass were driven into tree trunks, and a cow became embedded in a tree.
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In her WeatherBug blog, Stephanie Blozy alluded to stories of a coat hanger blended into a wooden board, and wood splinters stuck into a brick, though no direct references were given. In the comments section, Russell L. DeGarmo claimed he saw a two-by-four driven through both the front and back walls of a two-story brick home, where the entry hole was smaller than the size of the plank. His parents had driven him to see this odd event in Pennsylvania in the early 1940s. Another commenter claimed to have seen a banana embedded halfway into a telephone pole. And Jim Mims claimed that NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, has a display of a section of telephone pole with a drinking straw embedded into it.
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Stephanie was brave enough to offer an opinion about what causes these events, which now seems fairly accurate.
Another theory based on quantum physics states that the piece of straw is electrically charged super fast as it spins in the center of the tornado, allowing it to exist on a “higher energy density.” When it flies out of the tornado and comes in contact with something of a lower energy density, it passes through that object like a ghost—until the energy levels are equal, and the straw is frozen in the object.
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Of course, numerous commenters attacked her for even stating this as a potential explanation.
In
Freaks of the Storm,
climatologist Dr. Randy Cerveny shared additional examples. A Minnesota tornado “split open a tree, jammed in an automobile, and clamped the tree shut again” in 1919.
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A tornado in India from 1838 caused a long stalk of bamboo to be completely embedded through a five-foot-thick wall with bricks on both sides.
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In 1896, a tornado in St. Louis, Missouri, drove a two-by-four plank of pine wood through solid iron, five eighths of an inch thick, on the Eads Bridge—and there is an excellent picture of it in the book from NOAA.
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This tree branch was pushed through the thick metal of an iron bridge during the massive St. Louis tornado of 1896.
In Mount Carmel, Illinois, a tornado in 1877 drove a brick through the outer wall of a house, the interior wood, the plaster wall, twenty-seven more feet between two rooms, and lodged it into a rear wall, without ever breaking any corners off the brick.
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In 1951, a bean was blended halfway into a fresh chicken egg—without ever cracking the shell—in Scottsbluff, Nebraska. Cerveny found a photograph of this peculiar incident, though there is not enough detail to really see what the egg looks like up close.
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Washburn University has a Web site discussing the June 8, 1966, tornado in Topeka, Kansas. This includes a report from Jan Griffin that describes how when her car was dug out from the wreckage two days later, items from her bathroom had somehow appeared in the trunk—though she obviously did not put them there, and apparently saw no sign of the trunk ever having opened.
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Another Web site features a photograph of glass pieces that had been embedded into an aluminum pipe—in a tornado on the Isle of Wight on June 19, 1985.
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In 2004, the Boonshoft Museum of Discovery displayed “bizarre artifacts that historical societies like to keep under wraps” in Dayton, Ohio, as reported in an AP press release. This exhibit included a gas meter that had been speared by a stick of wood in the Xenia tornado from 1974.
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This wooden board was driven through a vertical wooden post during the infamous Tristate tornado of 1925.
In some cases, strange orbs are seen. The NOAA Web site reported eerie yellow-colored “giant puff balls” in one tornado. Fred Schmidt reported seeing what looked like greenish “glassy marbles on a plate glass window” that were being “pushed across the sky.” There was no rain, thunder or lightning as he saw this. He also reported what now appears to be a classic case where he was popped over into time-space—thus causing all the normal sounds within space-time to disappear.
The quietness was eerie. There were no birds singing, which there usually were. In fact there were no sounds from any animals at all. . . . I also [later] saw what appeared to be a straw embedded in a telephone pole about halfway in, just as perfect as could be.
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Natural Antigravity in Water, Trees and Insects
A simple case of rotating air is enough to cause effects that fit our model nicely. What about rotating water? Let’s not forget that in our new model, gravity has spin currents in it—because it is caused by a fluidlike energy. If these spin currents get strong enough—by rotating vortex motion within the Source Field—they can create their own gravitational force. They seem to work in a sideways direction, creating rotating currents—such as tornadoes, hurricanes, ocean currents, and mantle currents below the continental plates—but in some cases this force can directly counteract the normal downward push of gravity. As Olof Alexandersson described in the classic
Living Water,
Viktor Schauberger allegedly discovered a gravity-shielding effect in nature by studying how trout could jump straight up, through high waterfalls, with seemingly very little effort.
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For decades, he observed that the fish would first “dance in a wild spinning movement” and then “float motionlessly upward” through the waterfall, even at unusually large heights. Even more surprisingly, on a late winter night with bright moonlight, he witnessed this same effect happening with egg-shaped rocks. He was looking into a mountain pool, within a rushing stream, when an egg-shaped stone almost as big as a human head started doing a spinning dance just like the trout would do. It then rose to the surface of the water—and a circle of ice quickly formed around it. (Such bizarre and sudden changes in temperature are also consistent with matter popping into time-space. Remember—we might think that a gateway into time-space would increase temperature, but Kozyrev actually proved it makes things colder.) Eventually, Schauberger saw several egg-shaped stones all do the same thing in sequence. He analyzed them and found that besides the egg shape, they all contained metals.
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How do giant trees actually pull sap all the way up their trunks? Physicist Dr. Orvin E. Wagner, who worked at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, taught physics at California State Polytechnic University and conducted research in condensed matter physics at Lockheed Research Laboratory in Palo Alto, California, researched this subject. He did biophysics research since 1966 that led him to discover a wave effect in plants as of 1988, wherein he began devoting himself full-time to studying these mysteries.
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In 1992 and 1994, he published papers in mainstream journals outlining his discovery that plants and trees are using a gravity-shielding effect to create sap flow.
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Although some of the flow could be caused by suction from the evaporation in the leaves, that cannot account for everything Wagner observed. It appears that the branches of trees create a vortex effect not unlike what we see in the pyramids. They may create a rotating spin current of gravitational force that is sufficient to push the sap up the tree.
Wagner cut small holes into the xylem tissue of trees and used tiny accelerometers to confirm that gravity was not as strong inside those areas. Tiny hanging weights recorded a decrease of up to 22 percent of the force of gravity inside vertical holes of slightly leaning trees. He also found similar forces in a hole within a horizontal root—creating thrust in the direction the root was pointing. Wagner believes that “inside the plant tissue itself, likely the forces are much larger.” He also found consistent evidence that plant branches tend to grow at angles that are always multiples of five degrees, suggesting they are somehow harnessing a spiraling, geometric wave component that naturally exists within gravity.
Wagner also claims to have demonstrated the existence of these waves by simply rotating glass tubes filled with particles of dust. The waves appeared in how the particles arranged themselves. Wagner has an interesting theory of how all this works.
A growing plant stem acts like a tuned wave guide. . . . A stem growing at a certain angle to the gravitational field adjusts its cell sizes, internodal spacings and other structures to conform to the [geometric] wavelengths associated with that particular angle.
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Dr. Viktor Grebennikov was an entomologist (insect scientist) who discovered the Cavity Structural Effect, as we previously discussed—but this also led to a realization that certain insects appear to be naturally using gravity-shielding technology as well.
I was examining the chitin shells of insects under my microscope in the summer of 1988 along with their pinnate antennae, the fish-scale microstructure of butterfly wings, iridescent colors, and other inventions of nature. I became interested in an amazingly rhythmical microstructure of one large insect [wing casing]. . . . It was an extremely well-ordered composition, as though stamped out by factory equipment according to special blueprints and calculations. As I saw it, the intricate sponginess was clearly unnecessary either for the strength of the part, or for its decoration. I have never observed anything like this unusual micro-ornament either in nature, in technology, or in art. Because its structure is three-dimensional, I have been unable to capture it in a drawing so far, or a photograph. . . . Was it perhaps a wave emitter using “my” multiple cavity structures effect? That truly lucky summer, there were very many insects of this species, and I would capture them at night. . . .
I placed the small, concave chitin plate on the microscope stage in order to again examine its strangely star-shaped cells under strong magnification. I again admired this masterpiece jewel work of nature. I was about to place a second identical plate with the same unusual cell structure on its underside, almost purposelessly on top of the first one. But then. The little plate came loose from my tweezers, hung suspended above the other plate on the microscope stage for a few seconds, then turned a few degrees clockwise and slid to the right, then turned counterclockwise and swung—and only then it abruptly fell on the desk.
You can imagine what I felt at that moment. When I came to my senses, I tied a few panels together with a wire and it wasn’t an easy thing to do. I succeeded only when I positioned them vertically. What I got was a multi-layered chitin block and I placed it on the desk. Even a relatively large object, such as a thumbtack, would not fall on it. Something pushed it up and aside. When I attached the tack on top of the “block,” I witnessed incredible, impossible things. The tack would disappear from sight for a few moments. That was when I realized that this was no “beacon,” but something entirely different.
And I became again so excited that all the objects around me became foggy and shaky. I managed to pull myself together with huge effort in a couple of hours, and I continued working. This is how it all started. Of course, much still remains to be understood, verified, and tested.
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