It may sound a little far fetched, but could the Prez
have originated and been groomed by the Reptilians
from one of the malevolent cavernous worlds? We
really don't know if that's true, but could that be
possible, and therefore make this "on-topic?" He
may have been abducted by them as an infant,
or fully been bred from one of their species. There
was an old movie that took place in France about
an assassin who nobody knew, and there wasn't one
fingerprint record of the guy anywhere, either.
Mike, NYC
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
It may sound a little far fetched, but could the Prez
have originated and been groomed by the Reptilians
from one of the malevolent cavernous worlds? We
really don't know if that's true, but could that be
possible, and therefore make this "on-topic?" He
may have been abducted by them as an infant,
or fully been bred from one of their species. There
was an old movie that took place in France about
an assassin who nobody knew, and there wasn't one
fingerprint record of the guy anywhere, either.
Mike, NYC
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Waves of energy including giants packs of charged particles were shot from the
ocean floor into the atmosphere, and were even visible to the naked eye.
Another plain evidence supporting the Cater Physics Again, what causes
Earthquakes, folks?
Tsunami shot glowing waves into sky
NationalJun. 21, 2011 - 07:01AM JST( 10 )
The tsunami that devastated Japan in March and sent awesome waves of water
across the Pacific Ocean also sent glowing waves into the sky, a phenomenon
scientists caught on camera.
The massive 9.0 magnitude earthquake that struck below the seafloor on March 11
sent waves of energy rushing through the ocean. That energy created the
monstrous and deadly tsunami, but the tsunami itself sent waves of energy racing
high into the atmosphere, smashing charged and neutral particles together as
they went, which created so-called “airglow,” Science News reported.
Scientists operating a camera atop a mountain in Hawaii caught the airglow on
film, a first, the researchers said.
“It’s just total serendipity that we got this measurement,” Jonathan Makela, an
atmospheric scientist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign told
Science News. “It’s a really neat example of how the environment is coupled
together.”
Tsunami sky waves are a grand affair. The waves can travel higher than 180 miles
(300 km) above the Earth, equivalent to a trip from Chicago to Indianapolis.
Their peaks and valleys are meters, sometimes hundreds of meters apart; their
horizontal wavelengths — the distance from one peak to the next — can be several
hundred kilometers.
Scientists have measured these atmospheric waves using GPS instruments in the
past, but the new photograph from Hawaii is the first actual image of these
waves in action.
Those who have studied these waves extensively have said that with the proper
observational tools in place, these tsunami sky waves could complement current
early warning systems for the deadly, terrestrial waves.
Our Amazing Planet
External Link: http://www.ouramazingplanet.com/
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