"Don Wiegel" wrote:
< " Did you ever wonder why the oceans are filled with salt water
instead of fresh? Just where did the salt come from? And is it the same salt
you find
on a dining room table? Most of the salt in the oceans came from land. Over
millions of years, rain, rivers, and streams have washed over rocks
containing the compound sodium chloride (NaCl), and carried it into the
sea...." >
Manufacturing minerals is a life process that has shaped the continents
and our history.
http://www.wholeearthmag.com/ArticleBin/274.html
Biological Transmutation : EVIDENCE THAT ATOMS BEHAVE DIFFERENTLY IN
BIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS
THAN OUTSIDE OF THEM
http://www.keelynet.com/biology/bioxmute.htm
The Equation of Life suggests a sodium-potassium cold nuclear
transmutation process takes place in Human Biology in the presence of oxygen
and electrical excitation.
http://www.papimi.gr/ehttp://www.papimi.gr/eqoflif2.htmqoflif2.htm
With regards
Lew
----- Original Message -----
From: "Don Wiegel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, January 04, 2005 11:30 PM
Subject: RE: Salty water from Mars?
> http://www.onr.navy.mil/focus/ocean/water/salinity1.htm
>
> Ocean Water: Salinity
>
> "Did you ever wonder why the oceans are filled with salt water instead of
> fresh? Just where did the salt come from? And is it the same salt you find
> on a dining room table? Most of the salt in the oceans came from land.
Over
> millions of years, rain, rivers, and streams have washed over rocks
> containing the compound sodium chloride (NaCl), and carried it into the
sea.
> You may know sodium chloride by its common name: table salt! Some of the
> salt in the oceans comes from undersea volcanoes and hydrothermal vents.
> When water evaporates from the surface of the ocean, the salt is left
> behind. After millions of years, the oceans have developed a noticeably
> salty taste.
>
> The ocean waters can be divided into three layers, depending on their
> densities. Less dense waters form a top layer called the surface mixed
zone.
> The temperature and salinity of this layer can change often because it is
in
> direct contact with the air. For example, water evaporation could cause an
> increase in salinity, and a cold front could cause a drop in temperature."
>
> -DonW-
>
>
> ________________________________
>
> From: revtec [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Tuesday, January 04, 2005 7:31 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: Salty water from Mars?
>
>
> The oceans are obviously getting saltier each year as additiona
> minerals are disolved by rain water and washed to the sea. It has been
> calculated through measurements of river flow rates world wide with their
> associated salt content how much this is. This rate is such that the
oceans
> of 50 million years ago would have been fresh water. As I recall, this
> argument was used to debunk 6,000 yr. biblical creation, but now it has
> become a serious limitation to the 10's or 100's of additional millions of
> years needed by evolution theory. That 50 million is a maximum number
since
> leaching rates drop over time as the mineral deposits become depleted.
Also
> the structure of many of the worlds river valleys show evidence of much
> higher rates of water flow than we presently see.
>
> Check "The Genesis Flood" by Whitcomb and Morris for more details.
>
> Regarding the fate of Mars' water, are we approaching some
> vindication of Velikovski? There remain some difficult problems in
orbital
> mechanics.
>
> Jeff
>
>
> --
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