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| "AGHARTHA": INSIDE Our HOLLOW Earth | 31 Jan 2007 01:09 GMT | 2 |
2> "AGHARTHA", INSIDE Our HOLLOW Earth Update from The REAL Galactic Federation February 7, 2006
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| ...What do YOU care about? | 28 Jan 2007 19:29 GMT | 44 |
Three wishes is all we get. Or so the story goes. I wish that Mars teaches us to understand creation. So that science and religion will end their age-old conflict, and unite into a single method of
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| New insights into planetary temperature fluctuations | 28 Jan 2007 01:08 GMT | 4 |
Sun's fickle heart may leave us cold 25 January 2007 From New Scientist Print Edition. Stuart Clark
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| Need a flame war about Carbon Dating | 27 Jan 2007 17:01 GMT | 3 |
I know carbon dating isn't allowed at Bob Jones U., at least for white students, but that's not the kind I mean. I'm studying up on the topic and could stand to watch a good fight--that is, if the Young Earth types have anything smarter to say than "Jesus will get you for this."
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| Geo content, AmSci mag | 27 Jan 2007 00:16 GMT | 6 |
The Jan/Feb issue of American Scientist "journal of the Sigma Xi society" - the mag which emulates the late lamented style of the previous editorship of Scientific American - has some nice geology content. An article on estimating the frequency
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| Can you believe it? | 27 Jan 2007 00:16 GMT | 8 |
This taken from the 'Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER).News release'. ---------------- Just how ignorant must Bush be?
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| Any good but lesser known geology sites? | 24 Jan 2007 06:36 GMT | 15 |
Many of you who have been here awhile and thus on the Internet probably have come across some interesting geology sites - not the Top 20 that we all generally know about, but lesser known but good sites. If so, would you be willing to share some of them here for us?
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| Ping Jo | 23 Jan 2007 06:33 GMT | 12 |
Jo, How are you doing with the weather and ice? It's turned "nasty" here too :-) It was still around 32 degrees when I too the dog out at 0830.
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| Interesting feature | 23 Jan 2007 06:30 GMT | 2 |
http://blogs.abcnews.com/scienceandsociety/2007/01/face_on_earth.html Go into Google Maps, and look for this location: 50° 0'38.20"N 110° 6'48.32"W It's a bit east of Medicine Hat, Alberta. Here's a link where you can see it:
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| YES, WE HAVE NO BANANAS..... | 22 Jan 2007 01:24 GMT | 1 |
< PETRIFIED PENIS DISCOVERED BETWEEN COAL VEINS http://mysite.verizon.net/edconrad/FOSSILS/MVC-022S.JPG http://www.weirdnewstoday.com/uploaded_images/28-year-old-sperm-776773.jpg
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| electrical signals as a natural quartz stress sensor ? | 21 Jan 2007 21:02 GMT | 3 |
Has anyone ever used anything to measure the electrical output of quartz under stress to infer conditions underground? Quartz, being piezoelectric, should give off electrical signals under pressure;and that can be used to locate hidden quartz veins. Stress could be
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| What did the Flood Do? | 21 Jan 2007 05:43 GMT | 6 |
http://www.livescience.com/animalworld/061123_sealife_shift.html
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| Hawaii Volcanoes Vacation? | 18 Jan 2007 18:56 GMT | 8 |
It's about 10 degrees F outside, so it's about time for a Hawaiian geology vacation fantasy. Actually, I've never been there, and would like to start saving towards such a trip. As I understand it, tourists aren't allowed to wander by themselves out
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| Diamonds from outer space -- Geologists discover origin of Earth's mysterious black diamonds | 15 Jan 2007 22:28 GMT | 1 |
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2007-01/nsf-dfo010907.php If indeed "a diamond is forever," the most primitive origins of Earth's so-called black diamonds were in deep, universal time, geologists have discovered. Black diamonds came from none other than interstellar space.
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| What stones are these? | 15 Jan 2007 15:36 GMT | 4 |
Does anybody know what stones are these?: http://p30p0k5f.altervista.org/HPIM2069.JPG http://p30p0k5f.altervista.org/HPIM2070.JPG http://p30p0k5f.altervista.org/HPIM2071.JPG
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