Gmail Calendar Documents Reader Web more »
Recently Visited Groups | Help | Sign in
Google Groups Home
The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth, But dear Brad do your realize that even the facts are fraudulent ?
There are currently too many topics in this group that display first. To make this topic appear first, remove this option from another topic.
There was an error processing your request. Please try again.
flag
  Messages 126 - 150 of 151 - Collapse all  -  Translate all to Translated (View all originals) < Older  Newer >
The group you are posting to is a Usenet group. Messages posted to this group will make your email address visible to anyone on the Internet.
Your reply message has not been sent.
Your post was successful
 
From:
To:
Cc:
Followup To:
Add Cc | Add Followup-to | Edit Subject
Subject:
Validation:
For verification purposes please type the characters you see in the picture below or the numbers you hear by clicking the accessibility icon. Listen and type the numbers you hear
 
Greatest Mining Pioneer of Australia of all Times  
View profile  
 More options Sep 22, 5:35 pm
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: Greatest Mining Pioneer of Australia of all Times <australia.mining-pion...@neuf.fr>
Date: Tue, 22 Sep 2009 14:35:50 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Tues, Sep 22 2009 5:35 pm
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth, But dear Brad do your realize that even the facts are fraudulent ?
On Sep 22, 7:00 pm, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:

Brad

In fact Mountains foldings of any type demonstrate that twisting of
solid formations in all directions had no time to cool, as in the Mad
& Fraudulent Geology model of 60 millionz yearz for the Alpine
Orogenesis by ex.

The immediate uprise further brought up the whole horizontal layers,
as in  the Himalaya,  in the exact position they were laid out. NO dip
on most of the Himalaya Plateaux indeed !

Hence the solid structures had no choice except than to break up,  to
fold  or to metamorphose, and the whole work was over in a mere 6 to
12 hours to the most.

Incidentally Hydraulic counter reaction is called a fluid pressure
transfer.

Best

jpturcaud


    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
Discussion subject changed to "The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth" by BradGuth
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Sep 22, 8:41 pm
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 22 Sep 2009 17:41:46 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Tues, Sep 22 2009 8:41 pm
Subject: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth
On Sep 22, 2:35 pm, Greatest Mining Pioneer of Australia of all Times

Too bad that Zionist/Jews like rabbi Saul Levy and other Nazis are
scared to death of ever allowing our public funded supercomputers to
run models of our interpretation, as to the forming of these more
recent antipodes and/or hydraulic counter reactions from an icy Selene
impacting Earth.

 ~ BG


    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
Discussion subject changed to "The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth, But dear Brad do your realize that even the facts are fraudulent ?" by Hagar
Hagar  
View profile  
 More options Sep 23, 4:00 pm
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: "Hagar" <ha...@sahm.name>
Date: Wed, 23 Sep 2009 13:00:23 -0700
Local: Wed, Sep 23 2009 4:00 pm
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth, But dear Brad do your realize that even the facts are fraudulent ?

"The Other Guy" <knewskg...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:th8ib5d4rh2kuoj9tegtj1j9rgulj6ejst@4ax.com...

> On Tue, 22 Sep 2009 08:40:48 -0700 (PDT), Greatest Mining Pioneer of
> Australia of all Times <australia.mining-pion...@neuf.fr> wrote:

>>Dear Mr Brad Guth

> PLEASE don't feed the trolls..

Way, way too late.  These two loons have incited each other and the
resulting outpouring of mutual mental waste could rival the famous
Krakatau eruption ...

    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Sep 23, 4:32 pm
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 23 Sep 2009 13:32:56 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Wed, Sep 23 2009 4:32 pm
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth, But dear Brad do your realize that even the facts are fraudulent ?
On Sep 23, 1:00 pm, "Hagar" <ha...@sahm.name> wrote:

> "The Other Guy" <knewskg...@gmail.com> wrote in messagenews:th8ib5d4rh2kuoj9tegtj1j9rgulj6ejst@4ax.com...

> > On Tue, 22 Sep 2009 08:40:48 -0700 (PDT), Greatest Mining Pioneer of
> > Australia of all Times <australia.mining-pion...@neuf.fr> wrote:

> >>Dear Mr Brad Guth

> > PLEASE don't feed the trolls..

> Way, way too late.  These two loons have incited each other and the
> resulting outpouring of mutual mental waste could rival the famous
> Krakatau eruption ...

That's not half bad for such a kosher parrot.  I suppose now you want
that cracker.

 ~ BG


    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
Discussion subject changed to "The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth" by BradGuth
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Sep 29, 2:32 pm
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 29 Sep 2009 11:32:30 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Tues, Sep 29 2009 2:32 pm
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth
On Sep 21, 7:14 am, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:

Our Selene/moon simply isn't that of a solid rock with an iron core.
There's simply not sufficient mass (or average density) for such being
solid clean through.  Its unusually thick crust of mostly basalt
proves there's less density inside of that nearby and physically dark
sucker that's transferring and/or extracting 2e20 N/sec worth of
orbital tidal force.

 ~ BG


    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
Discussion subject changed to "The 1~10% hollow moon / Pat Flannery" by BradGuth
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Sep 29, 2:35 pm
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 29 Sep 2009 11:35:44 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Tues, Sep 29 2009 2:35 pm
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Pat Flannery

> Where's the mainstream science proving that our Selene/moon is not
> somewhat hollow?

Our Selene/moon simply isn't that of a solid rock with an iron core.
There's simply not sufficient mass (or average density) for such being
solid clean through.  Its unusually thick crust of mostly basalt
proves there's less density inside of that nearby and physically dark
sucker that's transferring and/or extracting 2e20 N/sec worth of
orbital tidal force.

 ~ BG


    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
Discussion subject changed to "The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth" by BradGuth
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Sep 29, 2:38 pm
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 29 Sep 2009 11:38:14 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Tues, Sep 29 2009 2:38 pm
Subject: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth

> Where's the mainstream science proving that our Selene/moon is not
> somewhat hollow?

Our Selene/moon simply isn't that of a solid rock with an iron core.

There's simply not sufficient mass (or average density) for such being
of a solid clean through.  Its unusually thick crust of mostly basalt
proves there's less density inside of that nearby and physically dark
sucker that's transferring and/or extracting 2e20 N/sec worth of
orbital tidal force.

 ~ BG


    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Oct 5, 5:22 am
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 5 Oct 2009 02:22:50 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Mon, Oct 5 2009 5:22 am
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth
On Sep 29, 11:38 am, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:

> > Where's the mainstream science proving that our Selene/moon is not
> > somewhat hollow?

> Our Selene/moon simply isn't that of a solid rock with an iron core.

> There's simply not sufficient mass (or average density) for such being
> of a solid clean through.  Its unusually thick crust of mostly basalt
> proves there's less density inside of that nearby and physically dark
> sucker that's transferring and/or extracting 2e20 N/sec worth of
> orbital tidal force.

Our Selene/moon simply is not through and through a solid rock, and
it's core isn't very hot nor nearly as dense as we've been told by
those we're supposed to trust with our lives and most all of our hard
earned loot.  In other words, our textbooks are simply wrong, or at
the very least incomplete.

Our NASA remains unusually secretive, obfuscating and otherwise in
nondisclosure denial of anything that might rock their job and benefit
security boat.  If you or I did such with public loot, as such we'd be
tossed in jail.

 ~ BG


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
Discussion subject changed to "The 1~10% hollow moon / Pat Flannery" by BradGuth
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Oct 7, 3:12 pm
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 7 Oct 2009 12:12:47 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Wed, Oct 7 2009 3:12 pm
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Pat Flannery
On Aug 31, 1:27 pm, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:

Apparently our physically dark Selene/moon and the otherwise extremely
vibrant and geothermally active planet Venus are still taboo/
nondisclosure rated.  Even the moon's L1 is forbidden, and our spendy
LRO/LCROSS missions aren't telling us anything that we didn't already
know.

Amazing what a firm kosher grip they have on the public brain and
private parts.  It's almost as though their puppet warlord Hitler was
still in charge of telling us exactly what to believe regardless of
those pesky laws of physics or the best available science.

Brad Guth, Brad_Guth, Brad.Guth, BradGuth, BG / “Guth Usenet”


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
Discussion subject changed to "The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth" by BradGuth
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Oct 7, 3:15 pm
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 7 Oct 2009 12:15:41 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Wed, Oct 7 2009 3:15 pm
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth
On Sep 29, 11:38 am, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:

> > Where's the mainstream science proving that our Selene/moon is not
> > somewhat hollow?

> Our Selene/moon simply isn't that of a solid rock with an iron core.

> There's simply not sufficient mass (or average density) for such being
> of a solid clean through.  Its unusually thick crust of mostly basalt
> proves there's less density inside of that nearby and physically dark
> sucker that's transferring and/or extracting 2e20 N/sec worth of
> orbital tidal force.

>  ~ BG

Apparently our physically dark Selene/moon and the otherwise extremely
vibrant and geothermally active planet Venus are still taboo/
nondisclosure rated.  Even the moon's L1 is forbidden, and our spendy
LRO/LCROSS missions aren't really telling us anything that we didn't
already know.

Amazing what a firm kosher grip they have on the public brain and most
of our private parts.  It's almost as though their puppet warlord
Hitler was still in charge of telling us exactly what to believe
regardless of those pesky laws of physics or the best available
science.

Brad Guth, Brad_Guth, Brad.Guth, BradGuth, BG / “Guth Usenet”


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Oct 11, 4:18 pm
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Sun, 11 Oct 2009 13:18:40 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Sun, Oct 11 2009 4:18 pm
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth
On Sep 29, 11:38 am, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:

> > Where's the mainstream science proving that our Selene/moon is not
> > somewhat hollow?

> Our Selene/moon simply isn't that of a solid rock with an iron core.

> There's simply not sufficient mass (or average density) for such being
> of a solid clean through.  Its unusually thick crust of mostly basalt
> proves there's less density inside of that nearby and physically dark
> sucker that's transferring and/or extracting 2e20 N/sec worth of
> orbital tidal force.

>  ~ BG

The moon interior is offering something of a lower than any mineral
saturated basalt composite density (as well as possibly semi-hollow
and/or of least compacted interior, with little of any iron core) than
the mostly solid basalt and mineral saturated crust of what such an
unusual surface of mascons has to offer.  The 1.5 tonne of TNT impact
wasn’t itself likely to be visible to the naked eye, although amateur
astronomy and their extremely sensitive and terrific dynamic range
capable cameras should not have had any problems whatsoever, unless
they were intentionally misinformed and/or simply not informed as to
where and when to look.  And of course the renewed and extensively
upgraded Hubble should have almost filled an entire FOV of that event
(nearly as good as the 395 meter focal-length KECK resolution), except
the Hubble image would have had a perfectly clean shot and having been
loads sharper and way better at the near IR, visual and UV spectrum.
So, where’s the beef?

 http://lunarnetworks.blogspot.com/2009/10/lcross-not-meant-as-enterta...
 http://wms.lroc.asu.edu/lroc_browse/view/M107049825RE

btw;  do bother yourself as to taking proper notice as to how the
average albedo of our Selene/moon as having been recorded by the
terrific dynamic range of our spendy LROC, as upon average is in fact
nearly as dark as coal.  Too bad we’re still not being allowed to
review any of the UV fluorescence imaging of those lunar minerals.  If
you look further, you’ll notice a few blocked out areas that the our
LROC team intentionally limited their zoom-on resolution (it’s what
one does whenever attempting to hide something like lunar clouds of
perhaps radon gas or possibly sodium).

Apparently our spendy LRO array of high resolution and extended DR
cameras, plus multiple other science instruments was nowhere in
position to image or record anything of the impact event or even of
its subsequent dust plume.

Of whatever electrostatic charged plume of physically sooty dark as
coal moon dust that was supposed to contain loads of near polar water
vapor, as such should have stood-out like a very sore thumb or even as
obvious as a red clown nose.  At least thus far we have next to zip/
nothing new to add to our extremely limited or rather mainstream
moderated knowledge of our physically dark Selene/moon, that we’ve
supposedly walked upon but somehow forgot to accomplish any truly
objective science (must be why they discarded all of our public funded
fly-by-rocket technology and having tossed out those 700 large and
clearly marked boxes of those spendy Apollo missions, along with much
of their original science data).

 ~ BG


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Oct 11, 4:19 pm
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Sun, 11 Oct 2009 13:19:55 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Sun, Oct 11 2009 4:19 pm
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth
The moon interior is offering something of a lower than any mineral
saturated basalt composite density (as well as possibly semi-hollow
and/or of least compacted interior, with little of any iron core) than
the mostly solid basalt and mineral saturated crust of what such an
unusual surface of mascons has to offer.  The 1.5 tonne of TNT impact
wasn’t itself likely to be visible to the naked eye, although amateur
astronomy and their extremely sensitive and terrific dynamic range
capable cameras should not have had any problems whatsoever, unless
they were intentionally misinformed and/or simply not informed as to
where and when to look.  And of course the renewed and extensively
upgraded Hubble should have almost filled an entire FOV of that event
(nearly as good as the 395 meter focal-length KECK resolution), except
the Hubble image would have had a perfectly clean shot and having been
loads sharper and way better at the near IR, visual and UV spectrum.
So, where’s the beef?

 http://lunarnetworks.blogspot.com/2009/10/lcross-not-meant-as-enterta...
 http://wms.lroc.asu.edu/lroc_browse/view/M107049825RE

btw;  do bother yourself as to taking proper notice as to how the
average albedo of our Selene/moon as having been recorded by the
terrific dynamic range of our spendy LROC, as upon average is in fact
nearly as dark as coal.  Too bad we’re still not being allowed to
review any of the UV fluorescence imaging of those lunar minerals.  If
you look further, you’ll notice a few blocked out areas that the our
LROC team intentionally limited their zoom-on resolution (it’s what
one does whenever attempting to hide something like lunar clouds of
perhaps radon gas or possibly sodium).

Apparently our spendy LRO array of high resolution and extended DR
cameras, plus multiple other science instruments was nowhere in
position to image or record anything of the impact event or even of
its subsequent dust plume.

Of whatever electrostatic charged plume of physically sooty dark as
coal moon dust that was supposed to contain loads of near polar water
vapor, as such should have stood-out like a very sore thumb or even as
obvious as a red clown nose.  At least thus far we have next to zip/
nothing new to add to our extremely limited or rather mainstream
moderated knowledge of our physically dark Selene/moon, that we’ve
supposedly walked upon but somehow forgot to accomplish any truly
objective science (must be why they discarded all of our public funded
fly-by-rocket technology and having tossed out those 700 large and
clearly marked boxes of those spendy Apollo missions, along with much
of their original science data).

 ~ BG

On Sep 5, 3:43 pm, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:

...

read more »


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Oct 17, 1:29 am
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 16 Oct 2009 22:29:09 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Sat, Oct 17 2009 1:29 am
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth
How much of the whole moon is made of sodium?

I understand that our Selene/moon also has nitrogen.  Isn't that a
formula for salt?

 ~ BG

On Oct 11, 1:18 pm, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
Discussion subject changed to "The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth, But dear Brad do your realize that even the facts are fraudulent ?" by BradGuth
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Oct 20, 9:55 am
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 20 Oct 2009 06:55:23 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Tues, Oct 20 2009 9:55 am
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth, But dear Brad do your realize that even the facts are fraudulent ?
On Sep 22, 8:40 am, Greatest Mining Pioneer of Australia of all Times

Or perhaps having multiple near misses of an icy Selene before the
final lithobraking encounter.

For some unexplained reasons, the modern world as of the last ice age
has to believe that we've always had that moon of ours.  I believe
it's mostly a faith-based kind of spooky thing, because otherwise
science can seem to place or nail down anything objective as to
exactly when Earth got the bulk of her seasonal tilt or the Arctic
ocean basin.  It's also as though 11,711 years ago was somehow just
another normal terrestrial thing that we have to accept without
anything objective as a global and/or solar cause to go by.

The "Cosmological Ice Ages" seems to fit rather nicely within the
elliptical trek we have had with the Sirius star system, and yet even
though there's nothing else out there that comes even close to what
Sirius has to offer, it seems the most mainstream opposition to any of
this is that of the kosher interpretation, that's as faith-based
closed mindset as you can possibly get, including their recent
obfuscation/exclusion of those Newtonian laws of physics.

 Brad Guth, Brad_Guth, Brad.Guth, BradGuth, BG / “Guth Usenet”
 http://www.alaskapublishing.com
 http://www.guarddogbooks.com


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
Discussion subject changed to "The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth" by BradGuth
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Oct 20, 2:57 pm
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 20 Oct 2009 11:57:21 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Tues, Oct 20 2009 2:57 pm
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth
Where's all the Usenet/newsgroup expertise hiding these days? (afraid
of what sort of kosher approved punishment you'll get?)

 ~ BG

On Aug 28, 11:00 am, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:

...

read more »


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
Discussion subject changed to "The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth, But dear Brad do your realize that even the facts are fraudulent ?" by BradGuth
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Oct 24, 9:17 am
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, 24 Oct 2009 06:17:36 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Sat, Oct 24 2009 9:17 am
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth, But dear Brad do your realize that even the facts are fraudulent ?
On Oct 20, 6:55 am, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:

There actually is a natural or preexisting hole or vertical cave like
entrance into that thick crust of our moon, plus odds are looking good
there will be others discovered.  There's still no objective or
deductively subjective reasons to believe that moon isn't at least
semi-hollow within and under that robust and heavy mineral saturated
crust.

 http://www.tonic.com/article/newly-found-moon-hole-may-lead-to-cave/

 http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn18030-found-first-skylight-on-t...

 ~ BG


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
Discussion subject changed to "The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth" by BradGuth
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Oct 25, 4:45 pm
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Sun, 25 Oct 2009 13:45:49 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Sun, Oct 25 2009 4:45 pm
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth
On Oct 20, 5:55 am, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:

Do I sense the fear of those that should know better?

Why does our Selene/moon have to be solid, clean through and through?

If it's supposedly solid (compacted to its iron core), then why
doesn't it have greater mass?

 ~ BG


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Oct 27, 12:26 am
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 26 Oct 2009 21:26:16 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Tues, Oct 27 2009 12:26 am
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth
On Oct 25, 12:45 pm, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:

Where is it objectively nailed shut that our moon is a solid orb?

 ~ BG


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Oct 30, 4:33 pm
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 30 Oct 2009 13:33:28 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Fri, Oct 30 2009 4:33 pm
Subject: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth
On Oct 20, 5:55 am, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:

Why does the geology of our moon (from its physically dark surface to
its marginally hot core and apparent lack of any geothermal events
taking place) have to match that of what the mostly fluid sphere of
Earth represents?

That’s really odd, for all the best educated parrots of mainstream to
think that Earth’s interior can only increase in density and pressure
per added depth, because otherwise in deep underground caves or mine
shafts, other than the expected dynamics of atmospheric pressure
increase that’s obvious and somewhat minor (<42% increase per 3.5 km
depth unless you plan on artificially cooling that vertical column of
air in order to get a 100% increase per 3.5 km), there’s hardly any
other significant geology pressures for our physiology to contend
with, including while swimming or scuba diving in those deep
underground lakes or aquifers, and there’s certainly not any big
increase in gravity (if anything it only measurably increases ever so
slightly), and there’s certainly no objective way of telling if the
inner core is merely that of a dense shell that’s hollow inside, or
not.
 http://nopr.niscair.res.in/bitstream/123456789/2506/1/IJRSP%2037(1)%2...

Perhaps the geometric arch and/or robust geode like shell of whatever
sphere isn’t really as structurally compression worthy or even it’s
density all that buoyant as we’d thought.  However, we certainly know
that it can hold back a great deal of pressure.

Just because the pressure within the surrounding crust/bedrock is
increasing by roughly something less than 300 bar/km doesn’t mean
squat, especially when the deepest Russian well started getting into
lower pressures and/or somewhat less rock density at depths below 10
km, and at that kind of shaft depth and subsequent temperature there’s
only a relatively slight atmospheric pressure increase.

A true geode pocket that’s mineral/glass sealed and situated deep (say
at 10 km) might even conceivably offer less internal atmospheric
pressure than its external surroundings, at least until it’s broken
into.

A geode formulated layer or pocket with any sort of fluid(s) inside is
technically hollow, because that fluid or even whatever less density
substance(s) (such as sodium) can be easily removed and/or displaced
by hydrogen, helium, methane or some other gasses.  An interior cavity
of crystals can even be easily dissolved or simply fragmented and
removed or reutilized as is.  On the backside or farside of our Selene/
moon, under that extremely thick and robust basalt crust that’s also
rather unusually mineral saturated, mascon populated and otherwise
very paramagnetic, as such could be offering quite a large volume of a
hollow interior to work with.  Being situated 100 km underground might
seem downright testy, but on the moon it’s actually kind of nifty to
ponder.

 ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth BG / “Guth Usenet”


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Nov 3, 1:12 am
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 22:12:33 -0800 (PST)
Local: Tues, Nov 3 2009 1:12 am
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth
Is our physically dark moon really just a weird monochrome kind of
inert gray that's conditionally retro-reflective?

Are we still being intentionally fed selective science?

 ~ BG

On Oct 30, 12:33 pm, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Nov 3, 2:46 pm
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 11:46:59 -0800 (PST)
Local: Tues, Nov 3 2009 2:46 pm
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth
On Oct 30, 12:33 pm, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:

With near zero gravity within the offset core of our extremely unusual
moon, and perfectly good odds that the substance outside of that core
being of a relatively low density and/or semi-hollow substance that's
sandwiched between that offset core and the otherwise extremely dense,
thick and mineral saturated basalt crust, as such is what drives my
continuing interpretation that our Selene/moon is in fact usability
hollow.

 ~ BG


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Nov 3, 3:31 pm
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 12:31:00 -0800 (PST)
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth
On Oct 30, 12:33 pm, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:

With near zero gravity within the offset core of our extremely unusual
moon, and perfectly good odds that the substance outside of that solid
core being of a relatively low density and/or semi-hollow (poorly
compacted) substance that's sandwiched between that offset core and
the otherwise extremely dense, thick and mineral saturated basalt
crust, as such is what drives my continuing interpretation that our
Selene/moon is in fact usability hollow.

Even if this hollow or easily excavated under-crust potential were
limited as to 0.1%, as such this kind of volume would represent a
terrific off-world outpost and otherwise failsafe kind of habitat
that’s existing as is. (2.2e16 m3 is hardly insignificant)

The unusually mineral saturated and otherwise mascon populated basalt
crust itself could also have existing passages and/or geode like
pockets, as deep enough and volumetric enough to utilize as is.  In
fact, it might be extremely odd if such didn’t exist.

 ~ BG


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Nov 4, 9:40 am
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 06:40:21 -0800 (PST)
Local: Wed, Nov 4 2009 9:40 am
Subject: Re: The 1~10% hollow moon / Brad Guth
On Oct 30, 12:33 pm, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:

Water at the environment of 3e-21 bar (the vacuum as found at Selene
L1) pretty much instantly demoleculizes itself into something less
than atoms of hydrogen and oxygen, and that’s pretty much regardless
of its volume and original mass.  Therefore, the extremely weak
Newtonian force of gravity or molecular binding force isn’t
necessarily worth all that much when the water or whatever fluid
element itself represents a zero delta-V and especially when situated
within such an extreme vacuum.  If there’s anything holding a given
molecule of h2o together, it’s those strong electrostatic, diamagnetic
plus the usual atomic and subatomic binding forces and whatever
subsequent worth of good old pressure that doesn’t necessarily involve
or require gravity (although naked pressure can’t coexist w/o gravity
or vise versa, whereas artificial pressure or vacuum can coexist if
there’s a shell or artificial energy field of some kind)..

The extremely thick (50<150 km) and robust basalt crust that’s so
mineral saturated about our Selene/moon offers a terrific shell.
Within or especially under that shell is where life as we know it
could with some technology manage to survive, as well as manage to
contribute to terrestrial matters of exotic minerals and lots more.
At 0.1% hollow (within geode pockets, cavernous layers or easily
excavated to suit), there’s certainly no shortage of  habitat volume,
and the maintaining of pressure simply can’t be an insurmountable
problem.

 ~ BG


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
Discussion subject changed to "The 0.1~1% hollow moon / Brad Guth" by BradGuth
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Nov 5, 1:38 am
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 22:38:19 -0800 (PST)
Local: Thurs, Nov 5 2009 1:38 am
Subject: The 0.1~1% hollow moon / Brad Guth
On Oct 30, 12:33 pm, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:

Since I’ve gotten nothing but grief and avoidance about our hollow
moon, I’ve revised the topic from “The 1~10% hollow moon” to “The
0.1~1% hollow moon”.  Not that it matters, because the mainstream
still isn’t buying any of it.

Water exposed at the environment of 3e-21 bar (the vacuum as found at
Selene L1) pretty much instantly demoleculizes itself into something
less than atoms of hydrogen and oxygen, and that’s pretty much
regardless of its volume and original mass.  Therefore, the extremely
weak Newtonian force of gravity or molecular binding force isn’t
necessarily worth all that much when the water or whatever fluid
element itself represents a zero delta-V and especially lost to that
solar wind when situated within such an extreme vacuum.  If there’s
anything holding a given molecule of h2o together, it’s those strong
electrostatic, diamagnetic plus the usual atomic and subatomic binding
forces and whatever subsequent worth of good old pressure that doesn’t
necessarily involve or require gravity (although naked pressure can’t
coexist w/o gravity or vise versa, whereas artificial pressure or
vacuum can only coexist if there’s a shell or artificial energy field
of some kind)..

The extremely thick (50<150 km) and robust basalt crust that’s so
mineral saturated about our Selene/moon offers a terrific shell.
Within or especially under that shell is where life as we know it
could with some technology manage to survive, as well as manage to
contribute to terrestrial matters of exotic minerals and lots more.
At 0.1% hollow (within geode pockets, cavernous layers or easily
excavated to suit), there’s certainly no shortage of  habitat volume,
and the maintaining of pressure simply can’t be an insurmountable
problem.

 ~ BG


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
BradGuth  
View profile  
 More options Nov 5, 1:49 am
Newsgroups: alt.astronomy, sci.geo.geology, sci.astro, sci.space.policy, sci.physics
From: BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 22:49:46 -0800 (PST)
Local: Thurs, Nov 5 2009 1:49 am
Subject: Re: The 0.1~1% hollow moon / Brad Guth
On Nov 4, 10:38 pm, BradGuth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:

With a near zero gravity within the offset core of our extremely
unusual moon, and perfectly good odds that the substance outside of
that solid core being of a relatively low density and/or semi-hollow
(poorly compacted) substance that's sandwiched between that offset
core and the otherwise extremely dense, thick and mineral saturated
basalt crust, as such is what drives my continuing interpretation that
our Selene/moon is in fact usability hollow.

Even if this hollow or easily excavated under-crust potential were
limited as to a volume of 0.1%, as such this kind of crust protected
volume would represent a terrific off-world outpost and otherwise
failsafe kind of habitat that’s existing as is. (2.2e16 m3 is hardly
insignificant)

The unusually mineral saturated and otherwise mascon populated basalt
crust itself could also offer existing passages and/or geode like
pockets, as deep enough and volumetric enough to utilize as is.  In
fact, it might be extremely odd if such voids didn’t exist.

 ~ BG


    Reply    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
Messages 126 - 150 of 151 < Older  Newer >
« Back to Discussions « Newer topic     Older topic »

Create a group - Google Groups - Google Home - Terms of Service - Privacy Policy
©2009 Google