Nexus - 1706 - New Times Magazine-pages

Page 49 of 96

Page 49 of 96
Nexus - 1706 - New Times Magazine-pages

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EARTH PRECESSION AND MIcRO BLACK HOLES EARTH PRECESSION AND MICRO BLACK HOLES A connection has been made between a series of unexplained explosions, the Earth's precessional orbit in relation to the Sun, and the inadvertent creation of micro black holes at the Large Hadron Collider in Geneva. The Explosions ince the late 1970s, a series of unexplained, very powerful explosions in the atmosphere has concerned scientists and nuclear test ban treaty observers. Some were quite different to the normal meteorite strikes and were so exotic that they have been given names as "events". Some had the energy of small nuclear bombs. One explosion caused concern at the time when South Africa was suspected of testing a nuclear device in the atmosphere, because a satellite had detected a double nuclear flash at the explosion site. Another in Siberia flattened thousands of trees, on a smaller scale but similar to a more famous explosion almost 100 years earlier over Tunguska, also in Siberia. Meteorite fragments have never been found for these explosions. The object of the Cando event in Spain crossed the sky very slowly before crashing into a hillside, displacing a large amount of soil and tossing trees 100 metres through the air. Eyewitnesses travelling by car from Santiago de Compostela to La Corufia in the north stated that they "saw the object appear in the right side window" as large as a full moon. They leisurely parked their cars, got out and were able to witness the explosion in the direction of south-southwest. Meteorites simply don't travel "slowly though the sky", as this one did. It has been speculated that such events may also have occurred in the more distant past, but have only been detected more recently with the deployment of satellites. It is now possible to link eight such atypical explosions with a single source via new and verifiable mathematical evidence. This evidence is a bit complicated because it relies on probability and on Earth orbits. I'm presenting it in a form most easily understandable to the widest readership. On average, one such explosion occurs every year or two. In addition to these, there are the normal meteorite strikes. I was able to find documentation on the Internet regarding 11 such explosions since 1979. After eliminating those for which meteorite remnants have been found, | discovered that the following eight remain (listed according to sequential placement on a Standard Earth Orbit diagram): ¢ 18 January 1994, near the village of Cando in northern Spain; energy estimated at 2,000 tons of TNT! ¢ 19 January 1993, near the town of Lugo, near Ravenna in northern Italy; no energy estimate available.’ ¢ | February 1994, Marshall Islands, Pacific Ocean; energy estimated at 11 kilotons (11,000 tons) of TNT?’ ¢ 6 June 2002, Eastern Mediterranean Sea, from Libya to Greece; energy estimated at 26 kilotons (26,000 tons) of TNT.‘ ¢ 10 September 2005, near the island of Ischia off Naples, Italy; no energy estimate available.’ by Olaf Thomas Raabe © August-September 2010 Email: NEXUS ¢ 49 otrropie@gmail.com OCTOBER - NOVEMBER 2010 www.nexusmagazine.com