Interesting, Jones, thanks

 

I've seen lots of esoteric references to limestone.  It is said that a
primitive culture was able to levitate large limestone blocks many meters
high to

a ledge on the side of a mountain using

musical sounds, mostly like trumpets as I recall

 

Also Ed Leedskalnin's Coral Castle in Florida appears to have been built
with some kind of levitation.

 

Richard Hoagland found time anomalies on his computer connected Accutron
watch ( 360 Hz tuning fork) there and also

on top of Chitchen Itza in Yucatan Mexico.

 

 

Coral Castle <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coral_Castle> 

 

An Expedition into Ancient Mayan Torsion Science during the Grand Galactic
Alignment of 2012 <http://www.enterprisemission.com/mayantorsion.html> 

 

I don't know what to make of all this so must let it drop 'til explanations
emerge  :-( .

 

Hoyt Stearns

Scottsdale, Arizona US

 

From: Jones Beene [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2015 10:43 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Vo]:Limelight revisited wrt SPP

 

Light emission from lime (CaO) has been around for almost 200 years, but it
appears to be just now ready for the "limelight", so to speak.

Certain metal oxides emit more short wavelength light when heated than would
be expected if the emission were due to incandescence alone.  This was first
discovered during the 1820's when a young fellow by the name of Goldsworthy
Gurney (later Sir Goldsworthy Gurney) used the flame of his oxy-hydrogen
burner, to heat a lump of lime (calcium oxide).  He found that the lime gave
off a brilliant white light.

This is part of the backstory limelight, for those who are new to this
forum, and/or do not like to dig into the Vortex archives. Back in 2007-8,
at a time before SPP became the plat du jour, we were talking about thermal
and luminescent anomalies of CaO (lime). Some of this relates to f/H or
fractional hydrogen. Could these anomalies have been an early version of a
new and improved "dogbone"? 

 <https://www.mail-archive.com/vortex-l%40eskimo.com/msg25947.html>
https://www.mail-archive.com/vortex-l%40eskimo.com/msg25947.html

This is a long thread which may be strangely more relevant today than it was
back then, but to cut to the chase: apart from thermo-luminescence, calcium
oxide exhibits also so-called flame luminescence in the presence of hot
hydrogen. Why? Dunno. but calcium and oxygen both have Rydberg energy values
in their ionization potential (not to mention lithium, nickel and iron). All
of these elements can be found in Jack Cole's reactor.

The light emission properties are overwhelmingly intense. which is
thought-provoking in the context of surface plasmons, where the intersection
of light, electrons and a dielectric are the key to success.

Jones 

 



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