10-15-2008, 11:55 AM
gralienreport.com
After modeling nine years of spot-on satellite data published in a recent edition of Nature Geoscience, geophysicists now say that frequent changes in the churning movements of Earthââ¬â¢s liquid outer core could be weakening our planetââ¬â¢s magnetic field. National Geographic reported earlier this week that Danish geophysicists who co-authored the study have commented on the strange, surprising way that changes appear to take place in Earthââ¬â¢s magnetosphere in various parts of the world. This has prompted some to ponder whether or not paranormal phenomenon might be triggered by such activity, and even if the Mayans might have been correct about their doomsday theories for the ever-steadily approaching 2012.
Earthââ¬â¢s interior is actually composed of three solid layers and a single outer liquid layer which is pure molten metal, believed to be nearly as hot as the surface of the sun (and to my friends at the Shavertron Discussion group, this doesnââ¬â¢t include the portions that are inhabited by evil Deros, of course). The innermost layer is a large, iron ball infused with sulfur and other minerals which, though surrounded by intense heat, is also compressed from every angle by such pressure that it remains solid. Liquid iron makes up the outer core, and movement of these liquid outer regions works to create an electrical current, and this in turn generates the magnetic field surrounding our planet, which is close to 1,500 miles thick.
However, such magnetic changes are nothing new, and if anything, in contrast to the short time humans have spent on Earth, such fluctuations might be considered commonplace. In the distant past, Earthââ¬â¢s magnetic field has actually reversed hundreds of times, though such a change might take up to thousands of years to take place in a single instance. So far as how strange phenomenon might relate, could it be that areas where such magnetic phenomena are more active are also host to more paranormal activity? Instantly I am reminded of places like the Lineville Gorge in Western North Carolina, where brilliant globes of anomalous light appear over the mountaintops at night, or moving across the Atlantic, places like Highgate Cemetery in the UK where a strange vampire-like apparition is said to walk about at night. Or, perhaps most famously, there is the Bermuda Triangle, which has been known for a variety of strange phenomena for as long as the Western world has extended its arms into these regions of the Americas. All of the places listed above have been known to exhibit strange magnetic fluctuations and other bizarre electric phenomenon. Could it be that if Earthââ¬â¢s magnetic field is about to shift again, we can also expect to see an increase in paranormal phenomena at key places like this around the globe?
http://gralienreport.com/fortean-phenome...phenomena/
After modeling nine years of spot-on satellite data published in a recent edition of Nature Geoscience, geophysicists now say that frequent changes in the churning movements of Earthââ¬â¢s liquid outer core could be weakening our planetââ¬â¢s magnetic field. National Geographic reported earlier this week that Danish geophysicists who co-authored the study have commented on the strange, surprising way that changes appear to take place in Earthââ¬â¢s magnetosphere in various parts of the world. This has prompted some to ponder whether or not paranormal phenomenon might be triggered by such activity, and even if the Mayans might have been correct about their doomsday theories for the ever-steadily approaching 2012.
Earthââ¬â¢s interior is actually composed of three solid layers and a single outer liquid layer which is pure molten metal, believed to be nearly as hot as the surface of the sun (and to my friends at the Shavertron Discussion group, this doesnââ¬â¢t include the portions that are inhabited by evil Deros, of course). The innermost layer is a large, iron ball infused with sulfur and other minerals which, though surrounded by intense heat, is also compressed from every angle by such pressure that it remains solid. Liquid iron makes up the outer core, and movement of these liquid outer regions works to create an electrical current, and this in turn generates the magnetic field surrounding our planet, which is close to 1,500 miles thick.
However, such magnetic changes are nothing new, and if anything, in contrast to the short time humans have spent on Earth, such fluctuations might be considered commonplace. In the distant past, Earthââ¬â¢s magnetic field has actually reversed hundreds of times, though such a change might take up to thousands of years to take place in a single instance. So far as how strange phenomenon might relate, could it be that areas where such magnetic phenomena are more active are also host to more paranormal activity? Instantly I am reminded of places like the Lineville Gorge in Western North Carolina, where brilliant globes of anomalous light appear over the mountaintops at night, or moving across the Atlantic, places like Highgate Cemetery in the UK where a strange vampire-like apparition is said to walk about at night. Or, perhaps most famously, there is the Bermuda Triangle, which has been known for a variety of strange phenomena for as long as the Western world has extended its arms into these regions of the Americas. All of the places listed above have been known to exhibit strange magnetic fluctuations and other bizarre electric phenomenon. Could it be that if Earthââ¬â¢s magnetic field is about to shift again, we can also expect to see an increase in paranormal phenomena at key places like this around the globe?
http://gralienreport.com/fortean-phenome...phenomena/