gazbom
Jan 2nd, 2009, 3:04 PM
What does the sea bed tell us and where do these grids come from?
I came across a very large book published in 1980 by National Geographic; they had undertaken to map the ocean floor.
There is not a lot of information about the ocean floors and even less in the public domain. There are some very unusual markings and shapes to investigate.
Here are two images from that book.
My first response when I was looking through this book, well I had it on my coffee table and I was sitting on the floor flipping the pages, staring at the pages... I went and pour myself a stiff drink.
The only other images of the ocean floor I had seen up until that time was the USGS map of earthquakes, but these markings were much more prominent than any on the USGS maps.
These markings or structural shaping like this on all the ocean floors and on closer scrutiny the landmasses have some traces of similar markings, this is way outside the bell curve of probability.
What really begs asking, is how long has this true bottom imaging been available to the PTB, and how long to the public? Gale Smart and Norval Cunningham.
link (http://gazbom.blogspot.com/2009/01/larger-image-larger-image.html)
What is really astonishing here is the linear accuracy of the grid, some of these vertical type lines are hundreds, well thousands of kilometres long and too straight to be made by Mother Nature, well one or two we might say was a freak of nature but there are hundreds of these at almost equal distance. It is a grid pattern, of what purpose, I can't begin to imagine, look at the size of these grids look at the adjacent continents and you become in awe at there regularity, consistency and enormity, and you see nothing like this above sea level, what are we seeing here?
Gazbom.
I came across a very large book published in 1980 by National Geographic; they had undertaken to map the ocean floor.
There is not a lot of information about the ocean floors and even less in the public domain. There are some very unusual markings and shapes to investigate.
Here are two images from that book.
My first response when I was looking through this book, well I had it on my coffee table and I was sitting on the floor flipping the pages, staring at the pages... I went and pour myself a stiff drink.
The only other images of the ocean floor I had seen up until that time was the USGS map of earthquakes, but these markings were much more prominent than any on the USGS maps.
These markings or structural shaping like this on all the ocean floors and on closer scrutiny the landmasses have some traces of similar markings, this is way outside the bell curve of probability.
What really begs asking, is how long has this true bottom imaging been available to the PTB, and how long to the public? Gale Smart and Norval Cunningham.
link (http://gazbom.blogspot.com/2009/01/larger-image-larger-image.html)
What is really astonishing here is the linear accuracy of the grid, some of these vertical type lines are hundreds, well thousands of kilometres long and too straight to be made by Mother Nature, well one or two we might say was a freak of nature but there are hundreds of these at almost equal distance. It is a grid pattern, of what purpose, I can't begin to imagine, look at the size of these grids look at the adjacent continents and you become in awe at there regularity, consistency and enormity, and you see nothing like this above sea level, what are we seeing here?
Gazbom.