Re: [Vo]:Dead Sea Saga

2008-10-22 Thread Terry Blanton
This offers an interesting twist: http://www.mondovista.com/abraham.html Terry On Tue, Oct 21, 2008 at 5:00 PM, Stephen A. Lawrence [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: MJ wrote: However, if - as we believe - the mother tongue of Abraham and Lot was Sumerian, and the event was first recorded not in a

Re: [Vo]:Dead Sea Saga

2008-10-21 Thread MJ
Howdy Jones, One may speculate on an account of the dead sea event recorded in Gen 19. The description of the destruction of Sodom could be interpreted as an atomic explosion.. however, the wife, while looking back, became a pillar of salt. hmmm. According to Abraham's eyewitness

Re: [Vo]:Dead Sea Saga

2008-10-21 Thread leaking pen
The dead sea isnt an ocean, its a land locked sea, and the magnesium comes from local salt deposits. On a global level, sodium is more prevelant, but since the dead sea doesn't connect to the ocean, its not part of the averaging out mechanisms present in the oceans, so local differences matter.

Re: [Vo]:Dead Sea Saga

2008-10-21 Thread Stephen A. Lawrence
MJ wrote: However, if - as we believe - the mother tongue of Abraham and Lot was Sumerian, and the event was first recorded not in a Semitic language but in Sumerian, an entirely different and more plausible understanding OK, at this point the discussion has wandered into

[Vo]:Dead Sea Saga

2008-10-20 Thread Jones Beene
Looking to nature for partial answers - and to 'natural' mineral content ratios (with an eye to possible transmutation by virtual neutrons) -- when we look at a dynamic environment, like the Oceans of the world, compared to a unique but stagnant environment, like the Dead Sea ... certain

Re: [Vo]:Dead Sea Saga

2008-10-20 Thread Robin van Spaandonk
In reply to Jones Beene's message of Mon, 20 Oct 2008 18:16:51 -0700 (PDT): Hi, [snip] • Caesar and his successors paid soldiers in Dead Sea salt “salarium argentum”, or “salt money” in Latin. This became the English word “salary” One of the reasons that Rome wanted to keep such tight

Re: [Vo]:Dead Sea Saga

2008-10-20 Thread R C Macaulay
Howdy Jones, One may speculate on an account of the dead sea event recorded in Gen 19. The description of the destruction of Sodom could be interpreted as an atomic explosion.. however, the wife, while looking back, became a pillar of salt. hmmm. According to Abraham's eyewitness account from

Re: [Vo]:Dead Sea Saga

2008-10-20 Thread Jones Beene
Hi Robin This ties in nicely with the article on MgCl2 in the most recent edition of Nexus magazine. Hmmm,,, Interesting looking articles in there. Looks like the Oz version of Discovery but with more tolerance for the fringe. http://www.nexusmagazine.com/ That story must have started a

Re: [Vo]:Dead Sea Saga

2008-10-20 Thread Jones Beene
Richard, You were probably asking that question rhetorically - but that was why I referenced Louis Kervan: Kervan, Biological Transmutations - I think he is usually credited with the suggestion that 40K, the radioactive isotope of potassium, transmutes to calcium via biological-LENR which has

Re: [Vo]:Dead Sea Saga

2008-10-20 Thread R C Macaulay
Howdy Jones, Further to the saga of Sodom, the account recorded didn't menton an atomic explosion. It did mention raining fire and brimestone well.. err. sulfur. Hmm. down along the Texas and Lousiana coast there are numerous salt domes that are a favorite of petro geologists because of the

Re: [Vo]:Dead Sea Saga

2008-10-20 Thread Robin van Spaandonk
In reply to R C Macaulay's message of Mon, 20 Oct 2008 21:44:42 -0500: Hi, [snip] next... speaking of chickens.. anyone want to hazard a guess as to why a chicken can lay an egg ( calcium shell ),.. even IF.. their food intake has NO calcium content?? [snip] I think the suggestion has been put