If you've ever tried to make colloidal copper in distilled water you get
a precipitate like that.
 It's probably a copper oxide CuO, or hydroxide. CuOH is formed by
electroysis in water that contains salt...most air does have some salt in
it especially near the coast. If it's Barium sulphate, where did all the
sulphur come from? If there is sulphur present in his samples, copper
sulphate would the more likely particle. [It's blue just like his pics]
He doesn't seem to know the difference between a suspension and a solution.
..and he would have a LOT of sulphur in his air. [sulphuric acid?]
 He says copper sulphate is soluable in water but doesn't mention  copper
sulphate and anhydrous copper sulphate  which is used to absorb water out
of the air in closets and such. [Blue Vitriol..a crystal.]  It turns bright
blue when it absorbs moisture but doesn't dissolve...that would make a mess]

 Van Nostrums Scientific Encyclopedia shows "Barium Sulphate BaSO4, white
precipitate". {NOT blue like his samples} It mentions no other precipitates
of barium compounds that are any other color than greyish white and white.
 

 Ole Clifford Carnicom made some assumptions based on what he thought the
precipitate *wasn't* but didn't get an atomic absorption test or a spectro
analysis to show what it *is*.
 Nor did he look up what a Barium Sulphate precipitate is supposed to look
like [ie: white] or consider the various copper compounds that DO look like
his particle.

 Conned again?
Ken


At 08:04 PM 5/29/02 EDT, you wrote:
> For chemtrail watchers 
>
>http://www.carnicom.com/precip1.htm
>
>Phil Sr
>
>
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