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Guys and Gals,

This is a bona fide good article from Rense on Geysers on Mars. They are
easy to see on the third photo lik down. Looks like somebody has been
drilling for oil around the South pole of Mars. We ought to send George W.
Bush there- he couldn't miss.

Dharma/Dean

Blake,

I've been thinking about your comments about foreshortening of the horizon
in North Pole pictures. You couldn't be more right. Peary's sledding speeds
near the pole were around 40 miles per day and, on his way back, as much as
70! I don't think that smooth ice nor a " prepared " trail on the way back
can quite account for such speeds. Obviously, the curvature is much more
acute near the poles, to the point that it even slopes downwards. By the
time he hit Northen Greenland or Ellesmere, I forget which, Greely was
already reporting a foreshortened horizon. Here is from Raymond Bernard's
book:

" Greely's description of passing around the curve into the polar opening is
exceedingly good and clear. He says:

' The deep interest with which we had hitherto persued our journey was now
greatly intensified. The eye of civilised man had never seen, or his feet
trodden, the ground over which we were traveling. A strong, ernest desire to
press forward at our best speed seized us all. As we neared each projecting
spur of the land ahead, our eagerness to see what was beyond became so
intense at times as to be painful. Each point we reached brought a new
landscape in sight, and always in advance was a point which cut off a
portion of the horizon and caused a certain disappointment.

If Greely and his companions were entering into the interior of the Earth,
they would certainly find that the Earth has a greater curve near the poles
than at any other place; ..." ( Page 104 )

This means that the polar area is within the downward slope. The downward
slope may not be exactly the neck of the opening, but it is within the
opening. If the opening were a ceral bowl, maybe the pole would be at about
20% down on the inside. Just a wild guess.

Dharma/Dean

Whoops!

Thanks for the tip, Jeff.

Here is the address.

http://www.rense.com/general6/cm.htm

Dharma/Dean

Members,

Here is from the book A JOURNEY TO THE EARTH'S INTERIOR by Marshall B.
Gardner, pages 124 - 125. Again, the anomalous warming experienced was not
just in relation to the water- underground volcanoes could account for that.
Even the air was warmer than it should have been, and this is a typical
anomoly. Of course, we would say that it is due to warmer air emanating from
the interior of the planet.

The fact that anonalous warmth is experienced which is not due to volcanic
activity gives new meaning to the warming experienced on dry land in
Northern Greenland and Ellesmere Island. I do a post on that on Saturday.

In the meantime, this book of Gardner's is easy and enjoyable reading, and
only costs about $20 or so. Get it, the quality of this uncensored data is
very special

http://www.healthresearchbooks.com/categories/hollowearth.htm

Dharma/Dean

Here is Garner's Book:

WARMTH WHERE COLD WAS EXPECTED
By November 13th the party had proceeded a little further north, and Dr.
Hayes, believing as he did that the pole was a solid ice-cap, is sorely
puzzled by the actual phenomena with which he is met. Here is his diary, the
first entry, " Worse and worse," referring to the fact that snow had been
falling, which made it very disagreeable on the ship:

" November 13: Worse and worse. The temperature has risen again, and the
roof over the upper deck gives us once, more a worse than tropic shower. The
snow, next the ice, grows more slushy, and this I am more than ever puzzled
to understand, since I have found today that the ice, two feet below the
surface, has a temperature of twenty degrees; at the surface it is nineteen
degrees, and the snow in contact with it is eighteen degrees. The water is
twentynine degrees.

" November 14. The wind has been blowing for nearly twenty-four hours from
the northeast, and yet the temperature holds on as before. At ten o'clock
this evening it was four and a half degrees. I have done with speculation. A
warm wind from the `mer de glace,' and this boundless reservoir of Greenland
frost, makes, mischief with my theories, as facts have heretofore, done with
the theories of wiser men. As long as the wind came from the sea I could
find excuse for the unseasonable warmth."

It is a pity that the open-minded spirit shown there is not more evident
among other scientists. Dr. Hayes would have tried to explain that warmth if
he could possibly have done so. But when the wind that brought it came no
longer from a sea that was itself above freezing point but came from a land
that was covered with ice, he was simply at his wits' end and frankly
acknowledged that he could not account for the phenomenon. So he left it an
open question. And it has really been an open question ever since-but it is
at last closed.

Let us, however, follow Dr. Hayes still further north. Bv the end of
November the Arctic night
has set in. The voyagers are by now a little farther north. And yet here is
the sort of thing that happens to the temperatures:

" The temperature had been strangely mild, a circumstance at least in part
accounted for by the open water, and to this same cause was due no doubt the
great disturbance of the air, and the frequency of the gales. I have
mentioned in the last chapter a very remarkable rise in the thermometer
which occurred early in November (see above) ; but a still greater elevation
of temperature followed a few weeks later, reaching as high as 32 degrees.
In consequence of this sudden and unaccountable event, the thaw was renewed,
and our former discomfort arising from the dampness on deck and in our
quarters was cxperienced in an aggravated degree. . ."

Then snow began to fall, and Dr. Hayes was still more astonished-- for this
was above the line where snow usually falls-- when it was followed by a
shower of rain. He also noticed that the snow came " in very beautiful and
perfectly formed crystals, which is always, he says, a sign that the snow
was formed in a temperature that is quite mild. " I have not observed them
when the thermometer ranged below zero."

But by January 13 quite a good deal more snow had fallen, and in spite of
the fact that there had been terrific storms the air had never been really
cold. (The party were wintering at Port Foulke.)

Nice Earth pic!

Dharma/Dean