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World's deepest hole could be the key to limitless energy


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5 minutes ago, Desertrat56 said:

Some of us can hear it, and think about it, it is microwaves flooding the air everywhere, we cook with microwaves.   

Because you can hear it, it's a health hazard?

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9 minutes ago, Desertrat56 said:

In the city I live in now, the water is supposed to be drinkable but it smells too strongly of chlorine for me so I filter it 3 times before I use or drink it.  When I lived in Mannheim, Germany I know no one ever thought of drinking water out of the tap.

No smell of chlorine here.

And the Netherlands is not Germany.

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22 minutes ago, Abramelin said:

And why is that a health hazard?

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/does-cell-phone-cause-brain-cancer-study-means-202744690.html

I was watching a video the other day and it was testimony before Congress and a lady said the way they induce cancer in mice was to expose them to 2.4G. I can't find the video at the moment but will post it if I do.

Edited by Buzz_Light_Year
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3 minutes ago, Buzz_Light_Year said:

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/does-cell-phone-cause-brain-cancer-study-means-202744690.html

I was watching a video the other day and it was testimony before Congress and a lady said they way they induce cancer in mice was to expose them to 2.4G. I can't find the video at the moment but will post it if I do.

That may be true for phone addicts. I'm glad I'm not one of them.

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12 minutes ago, Abramelin said:

Because you can hear it, it's a health hazard?

No, because it is microwaves.

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9 minutes ago, Abramelin said:

No smell of chlorine here.

And the Netherlands is not Germany.

I know.  I was just listing the places I have lived that you do not drink the tap water.

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6 minutes ago, Desertrat56 said:

No, because it is microwaves.

Well, then what?

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On 3/14/2022 at 7:29 PM, Desertrat56 said:

No, because it is microwaves.

I assume you don't live in a tent.

You worry about microwaves. Well, in that case maybe you should worry more about the house you live in:

"Radon has been considered the second leading cause of lung cancer and leading environmental cause of cancer mortality by the EPA, with the first one being smoking.[138] Others have reached similar conclusions for the United Kingdom[127] and France.[139] Radon exposure in homes and offices may arise from certain subsurface rock formations, and also from certain building materials (e.g., some granites). The greatest risk of radon exposure arises in buildings that are airtight, insufficiently ventilated, and have foundation leaks that allow air from the soil into basements and dwelling rooms.

Thoron was measured at comparatively high concentrations in buildings with earthen architecture, such as traditional half-timbered houses and modern houses with clay wall finishes. Because of its short half-life, thoron occurs only close to the earthen surfaces as its sources whereas its progeny can be found throughout the indoor air of such buildings. Therefore, radiation exposure occurs at any location within such houses. In different dwellings with earthen architecture in Germany, a study found annual internal radiation doses due to the inhalation of thoron and its progeny of up to several milli-Sieverts.[140]"

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radon

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On 3/13/2022 at 12:01 PM, Desertrat56 said:

So it may be up to the "unwashed masses" to create what they need, outside of the restrictions of the profiteers.   

Hi Desertrat

Back home the University of Regina constructed a geothermal plant in 1979

https://www.uregina.ca/international/events/2020/03/Geothermal-Project.html#:~:text=Western Sedimentary Basin.-,This work is a continuation of research in 1979%2C when,geothermal test well was constructed.

University of Regina Geothermal Project: Its time has come!

Thu., Mar. 12, 2020 7:00 p.m. - Thu., Mar. 12, 2020 9:00 p.m.

Location: College Avenue -CB 139-

Speaker: Dr. Janis Dale, Associate Professor, Department of Geology, University of Regina.

A Working Group research team at the University of Regina, Saskatchewan is proposing to construct a deep geothermal energy demonstration project using heat from the Deadwood/Winnipeg aquifer at the base of the Western Sedimentary Basin. This work is a continuation of research in 1979, when an exploratory geothermal test well was constructed. Resulting studies on the hydrogeology and geothermal productive capacity of the well supported the reliable development of this resource in the greater Regina area, and is well documented by over 40 research papers. The second well required to complete the project was never drilled and the original well was capped in 1999. Today geothermal offers several alternatives to our heating needs on campus and elsewhere.

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19 hours ago, Abramelin said:

I assume you don't live in a tent.

You worry about microwaves. Well, in that case maybe you should worry more about the house you live in:

"Radon has been considered the second leading cause of lung cancer and leading environmental cause of cancer mortality by the EPA, with the first one being smoking.[138] Others have reached similar conclusions for the United Kingdom[127] and France.[139] Radon exposure in homes and offices may arise from certain subsurface rock formations, and also from certain building materials (e.g., some granites). The greatest risk of radon exposure arises in buildings that are airtight, insufficiently ventilated, and have foundation leaks that allow air from the soil into basements and dwelling rooms.

Thoron was measured at comparatively high concentrations in buildings with earthen architecture, such as traditional half-timbered houses and modern houses with clay wall finishes. Because of its short half-life, thoron occurs only close to the earthen surfaces as its sources whereas its progeny can be found throughout the indoor air of such buildings. Therefore, radiation exposure occurs at any location within such houses. In different dwellings with earthen architecture in Germany, a study found annual internal radiation doses due to the inhalation of thoron and its progeny of up to several milli-Sieverts.[140]"

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radon

Wow!  You are a few decades out of touch.  Besides, you posting that seems to mean to me that you think anyone who posts something you don't understand or disagree with is stupid.   Are you just now finding out about radon?   And by the way, just because I live in New Mexico does not mean I live in a mud hut (or even adobe house).   

You don't understand microwave so you change the subject with something you read about recently.   

Edited by Desertrat56
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On 3/14/2022 at 12:16 PM, Abramelin said:

Because you can hear it, it's a health hazard?

No, because it is microwaves it could be a health hazard.   

Edited by Desertrat56
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The Perfect Energy Source Is Already Here – Endless Geothermal Is Poised for Release From Deep in the Earth

As physicists work in the nuclear fusion sector to unlock limitless clean energy through harnessing the power of the sun, they inadvertently invented a tool that could allow geothermal plants to deliver limitless clean energy by harnessing the power of the Earth.

That tool is a large millimeter-wave laser drill that will allow engineers to bore down more than 12.4 miles (20 km) into the Earth’s crust to harness the heat from the planet’s core.

Another link to nuclear fusion is that this laser drilling technology is being pioneered by a spin-off company called Quaise from MIT who also run a nuclear fusion reactor in Massachusetts.

The bottom line is that this idea is not science fiction, and Quaise has the money to put several full-scale demonstration machines into action by 2024, and hopes to have a 100- megawatt supercritical geothermal plant in operation by 2026.

At 12.4 miles into the Earth’s crust, temperatures soar to 500°C, a sector-redefining level compared to traditional drill bit borehole temperatures of around 200°C. At this stage and depth, water under the ground becomes “supercritical,” a state of matter where it’s neither a gas nor a liquid.

https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/super-critical-geothermal-energy-is-the-perfect-energy-source/

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4 hours ago, Desertrat56 said:

No, because it is microwaves it could be a health hazard.   

Many things could?

Adding a pinch of salt to your food makes it tasty.

Eating 100 grams of salt in one go will rupture your stomach, and you'll bleed to death.

It's about amount, concentration.

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4 hours ago, Desertrat56 said:

Wow!  You are a few decades out of touch.  Besides, you posting that seems to mean to me that you think anyone who posts something you don't understand or disagree with is stupid.   Are you just now finding out about radon?   And by the way, just because I live in New Mexico does not mean I live in a mud hut (or even adobe house).   

You don't understand microwave so you change the subject with something you read about recently.   

I understand microwaves, really. Do you?

And I started about Radon because if you are worried about microwaves the way you appear you are, you should also be worried about radon.

Btw., why are you p***ed of?

I question things, that's all. I'm not suggesting you are stupid or something.

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14 minutes ago, Abramelin said:

Many things could?

Adding a pinch of salt to your food makes it tasty.

Eating 100 grams of salt in one go will rupture your stomach, and you'll bleed to death.

It's about amount, concentration.

Right and how much has changed in the last 10 years in relation to how much we are using microwaves for communications?  

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23 minutes ago, Desertrat56 said:

Right and how much has changed in the last 10 years in relation to how much we are using microwaves for communications?  

Ok. What do you think microwaves can do to our health?

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Just now, Abramelin said:

Ok. What do you think microwaves can do to our health?

Probably depends on the frequency of the waves and the amount of exposure.   I have seen what happens to a bird that flew too close to army microwave tower in the 70's.   Maybe it affects the brain, the cells, organs, maybe it also depends on the person and their health.    I don't think it is benign, and there is a reason people are buying faraday cloth and other emf blocking materials.  It is not a conspiracy, it is just stupid humans not taking all the variables into account, because of profit and convenience.   (just like over using chlorine bleach or dumping waste into the same river the city down stream uses for drinking water).

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9 minutes ago, Desertrat56 said:

the amount of exposure.

And that's what I tried to explain.

If you literally sit on some energy source, you'll get burned, irradiated, intoxicated, whatever.

If you stick a fork in a power socket, you'll get an electric shock, and maybe die.

If you sit too close to a camp fire, you'll burn your a$$, or your hair/face, depending on which part of your anatomy faces the fire.

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1 minute ago, Abramelin said:

And that's what I tried to explain.

If you literally sit on some energy source, you'll get burned, irradiated, intoxicated, whatever.

If you stick a fork in a power socket, you'll get an electric shock, and maybe die.

If you sit too close to a camp fire, you'll burn your a$$, or your hair/face, depending on which part of your anatomy faces the fire.

You don't think sitting next to your modem that emits a wifi signal to your television and any other device that is wifi enabled, or even being in a neighborhood where everyone has those modems and lots of wifi devices as well as cell towers and other equipment is not sitting on some energy source?    The wifi at the library is strong enough that you can log on to their network from the parking lot.   And there are overlaps of wifi, just pull up a device and go to the wifi settings, it will tell you how many of your neighbors wifi signals are overlapping your property.

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