Thread: Zahori
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Old 04-30-2011, 03:06 PM
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Originally Posted by aft_72005 View Post
Hi J_Player
Yes, for most metals this voltage under 2 volt . For example ,underground
gas pips protection system used this method.
Are you sure long range base on this subject ?
I remember minoro animation
Best regards.
Hi Aft,
Yes I am sure.
As an engineer you know it is impossible for buried metal to build strong electrostatic field which can be measured. Any large electrical potential from buried metal is quickly shorted and dissipated in the ground. The most voltage a buried metal can develop is not a high static field. It is usually less than 2 volts, caused by the chemical reaction of corrosion. It is the same as if you buried a battery in the ground. This battery would show maybe 1.5 volts for awhile, but you could not measure this 1.5 volts as a strong electrostatic field from any distance.

The electrostatic field you can build in your body is quickly discharged and dissipated the moment you youch your body to the ground. It is the same for buried metal. Buried metal does not accumulate any large static charge. But if it did, then the ground in contact would dissipate it so it no longer exists.

The Mineoro propaganda has been shown to be false by scientists and technicians who measured the content of the air in different conditions. They found that gold ions do not exist in the air. Any ionized gold will quickly combine to make a gold particle. All of the gold floating in the air has been found to be solid gold particles, not ions. Chemists have seen that Mineoro propaganda is correct for gold ions moving up through the ground above treasure. But they saw that all these ions are neutralized in the last 10-30 cm before they reach the surface. This is where the gold ions combine to become tiny gold particles where they can attach to other gold particles and form micro gold dust. This dust can wash into the oceans or blow into the wind to become an extremely small concentration of gold particles. Gold recovery companies determined that it is much too expensive to build equipment to recover the gold from the oceans or from the air. They continue to look for larger concentrations that are found in deposits under the ground.

The entire Mineoro theory of gold ions floating in the air has been demonstrated to be wrong. You can also prove this is wrong for yourself by taking a drift tube ion detector near where you know there is buried gold. You will see the drift tube does not find any gold ions anywhere in the air near the buried gold or away from it.

The gold cannot cause any static electric field more than 1-2 volts depending on what other elements are near the corroding gold in the ground. This voltage is not easy to measure from the surface unless you are using probes like are used for ground resistivity. If you measure some voltage with this kind of probe, you may be measuring the gold chemical reacition voltage. But this is not likely because the gold ions are in very small concentration (around 3 parts per trillion), so any voltage is quickly lost in the when begin to collect some its current to measure it. But there are other metal ions in larger amounts which are easier to measure like copper, zinc, lead, iron, and others. These will be much more plentiful and are more likely to show some measureable voltage. And even then you cannot be sure you are measuring voltage caused by chemical corrosion. There are even stronger voltages caused by the telluric currents moving under the ground. These telluric currents can actually be used as a power source for low voltages. In the days before telephones, telluric currents sometimes powered the telegraph lines which used a single conductor, and a ground rod for the return path.

But back to LRL theories, ions could be involved because we know there are trace amounts of gold ions corroding into the soil and moving upward in a column. And electrostatics could be involved because we know there is a 100v/meter voltage gradient above in the air above the ground. We also know electrons are leaking from the ground into the air, driven by the force of this electric field gradient. Will this field gradient become changed above an area of more conductive, ionized soil where treasure is buried? You tell me... you are an EE. We have many choices for real physical phenomenon to develop a true explanation, but the buried gold emitting ions into the air and generating large electric fields from under the ground is not one of these possible explanations.

Don't take my word for it. Test the air above some buried gold and see for yourself if there are any gold ions floating around there. Also put some probes in the ground near the buried gold to see if you can measure any strong electrostatic fields under the ground.

Best wishes,
J_P
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