On Apr 9, 2007, at 6:51 AM, Jones Beene wrote:

... am trying to put a subject line on this posting, as it fell prey to the Vo blank subject 'virus'...

Yes, I'm still trying as well, and that was indeed the title swallowed.



I love the symmetry implications of this essay. Not to mention the energy implications: "Cosmic rays also sometimes consist of Calcium, Iron and Gallium, Lithium or Beryllium. The latter three, if in sufficient quantity, should be fairly easy to isolate from glacial runoff, and the cosmic species easily identified if present in sufficient quantities."

No doubt the "glacial runoff" aspect of this is already being investigated by Horace...

No not yet. I've certainly considered it in the past, especially in relation to mirror matter or monopoles, but it would be difficult for me these days.


and perhaps a bit earlier than normal this year as the Glaciers in Alaska are melting.

Yes, melting away.  What a waste on so many levels.


Is this related to long life expectancies in certain areas?

The stuff would have practically no effect as far as I know - except possibly in energy balances, and that only in high concentrations and only if some form of gravitational charge annihilation can occur. If cosmic matter did have some chemical effect then that would be handy for detecting or isolating it. Mirror matter, as ghostly as it is, would likely be more detectable. See:

http://www.ph.unimelb.edu.au/~foot/



It all ties into the "something in the water" aspect of the Graneau water arc - as well. Not to mention the other water-health hypotheses (as an alternative or explanation of Ormus or magnetite enhancement).

I must admit Graneau's "something in the water" aspect has had me puzzled. I find it hard to believe it is just sunlight. Exposure to cosmic rays doesn't require placing in sunlight though, so I just don't know what's going on there.


Perhaps there is a form of magnetite-colloid which consists of several normal Fe atoms which are bound to a cosmic-matter allotrope ???

Cosmic matter, if it exists as defined, is all around us, imbedded in all kinds of molecules. Cosmic rays are responsible for maintaining the C14 concentration in the atmosphere, 40 tons worth, as well as numerous other kinds of crustal isotopes. Over 4 billion years worth. That's a lot of matter. C14 is in every living thing. Further, meteoric dust rains down on us daily, continually burying past artifacts, as well as seeding rain and snow. Many meteors have been exposed to cosmic rays for billions of years.

Regards,

Horace Heffner

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