Originally posted by Aromaz
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Seeds from Outer Space
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Originally posted by sucahyo View PostSomething that penetrate all matter which is stronger at a higher place?Therefore we need to find NEW ways, NEW experiments and NEW lines of thoughts.
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Hi all.
I have been thinking about this a bit. And a thought popped in my mind. What if the seeds in their early life are acting somewhat like steamcells in an embrio? We know that in the very early stages an embrio consists only of steam cells that have the ability to turn in any other type of cells. After a while, some steamcells turn into blood cells, some turn into brain cells and so on. and after they have their assignment, they become this tupe of cells permanently. So maybe those seeds in outer space behave similar. Maybe the lack of gravity influences the seed cells similary. They get their orders in space and start to behave like that permanently
Just a thought. Could just as well be some sort of radiation.
I wonder what would happen if a baby would be born in outer space and I mean not just born, but if all the pregnancy would be carried out in outer space How would that influence the steam cells of the embrio in early stages?It's better to wear off by working than to rust by doing nothing.
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Originally posted by Electrotek View PostJetijs: Good thought about the cell differentiation.
A long time ago, I did read that the Russians did at least one experiment with sex in space. I don't know if a pregnacy resulted, of if it did, the outcome.
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Maybe sending seed to outer space harverting orgone when passing certain level of atmosphere?
The Wilhelm Reich Museum - Resources
In 1976, he exposed tomato seeds to orgone energy and found that the irradiated seeds produced a greater number of fruits and flowers than did the control group of seeds. Heckman went on to conduct further experiments in 1981, 1983, 1985, and 1986. In 1981, the exposed seeds produced fewer but larger potatoes. In 1983, using a five-fold accumulator, he achieved a 50% increase in yield from seeds exposed to orgone energy for one hour. However to his surprise, he discovered that seeds irradiated for 10 hours produced only a 23% increase in yield.
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nephilim
Originally posted by Aaron View PostI think it is something along those lines. The ancient records of "giants" from outer space may have been in low to no gravity for too long
The Nefilim are supposed to be giants but more accurately, Nefilim means Earth born to my understanding. They are supposed to be offspring of human women and the angels or watchers that may have been the "Igigi." So they had the genetics of their space traveling fathers and grew large.
Also, there was supposed to be less gravity in the past if the Earth was much smaller plus supposedly up to 50% or more oxygen content in the atmosphere so even the trees, etc... grew large (in lower gravity) by the Earth being smaller...I think that one idea of pangaea all fitting if the Earth is shrunk...makes total sense and the low gravity was therefore available down here.
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man-made vs natural radiation
As it turns out, melanin-containing fungi have a significant growth advantage over non-melanin fungi in the presence of ionizing radiation, such as at the site of the 1986 Chernobyl disaster. The paper demonstrates that the electron properties of melanin are changed in the presence of radiation, and that growth increases according to a number of different assays. Based on this and previous evidence, they "cautiously suggest that the ability of melanin to capture electromagnetic radiation combined with its remarkable oxidation-reduction properties may confer upon melanotic organisms the ability to harness radiation for metabolic energy."
Synapostasy: Super mushrooms and fishy fingers
The debate about Chernobyl as Paradise Rediscovered is raging on the pages of scientific journals because the experts can’t agree on what’s happening and why.
Biologist Robert Baker, of Texas Tech University, was among the first to report that Chernobyl had become a wildlife haven. He has taken research teams to the region more than 30 times since the early 1990s.
“It’s a fascinating and gorgeous place,” Baker says in an interview. “I refer to it as a kind of aquarium for animals and plant life.
“We’re of the opinion that there are, within both the 10-km and 30-km zones, more rats and mice and pigs and moose and horses and endangered species than there are outside of the zone. It’s evident that human behaviour is more dangerous for that environment than radiation.”
An acute radiation dose, obviously, is lethal; it kills off mammals with red blood cells. “But a chronic low dose doesn’t have the same effect,” Baker notes, basing his view largely on mice and rodents that, he says, have shown a remarkable tolerance for elevated radiation levels.
http://nmvsite.com/life-returns-to-an-eerie-chernobyl
YouTube - Huge fish in Chernobyl
YouTube - Wild Horses in Chernobyl Exclusion Zone (Equus Przevalskii)
Al
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Chinese-way radiation vs Natural Alaska (Due to ozone hole, maybe in the past?)
Originally posted by aljhoa View Post
“It’s a fascinating and gorgeous place,” Baker says in an interview. “I refer to it as a kind of aquarium for animals and plant life.
An acute radiation dose, obviously, is lethal; it kills off mammals with red blood cells. “But a chronic low dose doesn’t have the same effect,” Baker notes, basing his view largely on mice and rodents that, he says, have shown a remarkable tolerance for elevated radiation levels.
http://nmvsite.com/life-returns-to-an-eerie-chernobyl
Al
by Neil Woodburn (RSS feed) on Jul 16th 2007 at 2:08PM
State fairs in America are always a fascinating glimpse into a rural part of life that so few of us ever actually see anymore.
Each state fair is unique in its own special way but one that stands out from all the others is the Alaska State Fair and its fantastic giant vegetable contest.
Sure, every state fair has similar contests where local farmers wheel in giant pumpkins and other items they've either grown or raised on their land. The difference with Alaska, however, are those very long, extended summer hours when the sun stays out much longer than it does in the lower 49 states. Produce is exposed to the nurturing sunlight exponentially longer and as a result, can grow exponentially larger.
For example, here is a list of state vegetable records set in last year's Alaska State Fair:
23-foot, 3 1/2-inch corn stalk
4.702-pound parsnip
1,019-pound pumpkin
17.195-pound yellow zucchini
67 1/8-inch long gourd
55.15-pound blue hubbard squash
21.530-pound bushel gourd
Giant, Mutant-like Vegetables at Alaska State Fair | Gadling.com
Al
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