SH Archive The Wrath of the Gods: GeoWeapons vs Mud Flood

SH.org OP Username
KorbenDallas
SH.org OP Date
2019-06-29 23:57:14
SH.org Reaction Score
30
SH.org Reply Count
19
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Username: Red Bird
Date: 2019-07-02 21:15:11
Reaction Score: 2
Here's another legend:
ARK OF THE COVENANT | Wyatt Archaeological Research

The Ark of the Covenant Special Article
  • AT THIS TIME, WYATT ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH CAN PROVIDE NO CONCLUSIVE EVIDENCE REGARDING THE DISCOVERY OF THE ARK OF THE COVENANT.
There are many claims being made today as to the location of the Ark of the Covenant and the purpose of this site is to give you an opportunity to hear Ron Wyatt’s story as he has told it and his wife has written it. For now, we cannot provide conclusive evidence of his claims and we only ask you to consider carefully what you are about to read, and withhold your final judgment until you can see conclusive evidence.
What you are about to read is startling and may present new concepts that seem almost incredible. Wonderful and solemn new insight has been shed on a subject that is central throughout the entire Bible – the salvation of man through the death and mediation of the Messiah. As you read this account, remember the Biblical admonition:
 
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Username: KorbenDallas
Date: 2019-07-02 21:29:05
Reaction Score: 1
OK, I'm becoming guilty of this as well. Let us save this thread for the OP content related stuff, and dedicate a new thread to the location of the Ark of the Covenant.
 
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Username: asatiger1966
Date: 2019-07-03 06:19:17
Reaction Score: 9
As a paratroop our formations were above average for alignment and cadence. We, when in large formations a company " 200+" or larger would routinely break cadence. My company unit had over twenty five engineers at any given time.

If soldiers march in unison across the structure, they apply a force at the frequency of their step.

If their frequency is closely matched to the bridge's frequency, the soldiers' rhythmic marching will amplify the vibrational frequency of the bridge. If the mechanical resonance is strong enough, the bridge can vibrate until it collapses from the movement.

A potent reminder of this was seen in June 2000, when London's Millennium Bridge opened to great fanfare. As crowds packed the bridge, their footfalls made the bridge vibrate slightly. "Many pedestrians fell spontaneously into step with the bridge's vibrations, inadvertently amplifying them," according to a 2005 report in Nature.

Though engineers insist the Millennium Bridge was never in danger of collapse, the bridge was closed for about a year while construction crews installed energy-dissipating dampers to minimize the vibration caused by pedestrians.


In April 1831, a brigade of soldiers marched in step across England's Broughton Suspension Bridge. According to accounts of the time, the bridge broke apart beneath the soldiers, throwing dozens of men into the water.

After this happened, the British Army reportedly sent new orders: Soldiers crossing a long bridge must "break stride," or not march in unison, to stop such a situation from occurring again.

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As unbelievable as that might sound, there's strong scientific evidence to corroborate the story. The conditions need to be exactly precise for it to happen — but it is possible. When the Mythbusters first took on this story, they deemed it false. However, in a rare redaction, the dynamic duo reclassified this myth as "plausible."
 
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Username: WildFire2000
Date: 2019-07-03 16:35:37
Reaction Score: 5
Oh

Oh, it's entirely plausible, and ACTUALLY occurs. I was in the US Airforce in 2009, and when we went anywhere in formation on base, we broke cadence on -every- walkway or bridge. Anything that wasn't firmly attached to the ground, we were instructed to change our cadence. I was older and knew about vibrational resonance for bridges and all already and so I explained it to other members of my flight who had just graduated high school and had never heard of it. They took it in stride and seemed to believe me.

Anyway, bringing us back to topic for the thread there are very few, if any talks of sonic weapons (other than the Cuban Embassy and Chinese Embassy conspiracy's from the last year) and yet, to my thinking, given what we know about resonance and everything, they'd be PERFECT to use. I'm sure someone out there knows the resonance frequency of human bone, or even some of our internal organs. A directed (sonic) energy weapon of significant power could easily liquefy a person and/or natural loose materials such as dirt and mud. I do realize that it would take tremendous power and energy to produce the vibrations necessary, BUT, if our ancestors that were going around sinking buildings had atmospheric power ... there's unlimited power to draw from there. Point, click, and sink the infrastructure, and liquefy the humans living in the city, boom. Free city.

*shrug*
 
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Username: Red Bird
Date: 2019-07-03 17:47:04
Reaction Score: 1
Exactly. I’m not sure why this is not figured as the MAIN theory to begin with these days as it’s here in many forms.
 
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Username: maxresde
Date: 2019-07-10 20:31:14
Reaction Score: 1
Although I don't know what the mechanism would be, I would like to suggest that maybe this material was precipitated in place, possibly either from the atmosphere or from breaking down something already present.
 
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Username: Timeshifter
Date: 2019-07-12 12:37:26
Reaction Score: 2
If i did not know any better @KorbenDallas I would have thought that Bacon had frequented this forum, and selected all of the juicy bits to discuss in his essays.

100% folks, we are on to them and if we keep on like this, we will begin to not only uncover, but proof some real truths of our history!
 
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Username: Fraile
Date: 2020-01-21 16:00:11
Reaction Score: 5
Yes, and Hergé probably knew something about all this too:

The Calculus Affair (French: L'Affaire Tournesol) is the eighteenth volume of The Adventures of Tintin, the comics series by the Belgian cartoonist Hergé. It was serialised weekly in Belgium's Tintin magazine from December 1954 to February 1956 before being published in a single volume by Casterman in 1956. The story follows the attempts of the young reporter Tintin, his dog Snowy, and his friend Captain Haddock to rescue their friend Professor Calculus, who has developed a machine capable of destroying objects with sound waves, from kidnapping attempts by the competing European countries of Borduria and Syldavia.
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Username: BasicSkeptic
Date: 2020-01-21 16:28:31
Reaction Score: 1
Going along with the idea of Cymatics and Biblical stories of possible tech - what if the story of the walls of Jericho falling down due to the horn blowing is a form of Cymatics or vibrational tech through sound waves.
 
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Username: asatiger1966
Date: 2020-01-21 21:51:31
Reaction Score: 0
What a find, just incredible timing. Welcome please feel free to share any thoughts on other subject as well.
Thank You
 
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