Re: FW: Crop Circle depicts solar eruptions hitting Earth on Ju…

From: frankferg@aol.com

Date: 2009-07-04 15:58:55

George LoBuono says: Consider an alternative interpretation of the crop diagram: The large body is a star, maybe the sun, but instead of a mass eruption, a possible five extra categories of gravitic connectedness (cosmic) are portrayed in those parrallel arcs of circles. Opposite those arcs is the Earth, shown with a lunar juxtaposition and possibly Mercury on an inner orbit around the sun. If the purpose of the diagram is to protray a gravitic connectedness on a larger scale, the message could (possibly) be to remember that a too-direct use of scalar energy could result in either solar or seismic disturbances. The several rectangular table shapes suggest a metric of some sort, possibly posed in human conventional terms, i.e. like the periodic table but not quite.The sharply defined, small conic section between the Earth and one of the moon shapes could be meant to show how gravitic flux connects not only locally, but on a much larger scale. A be-careful subtext?   In a message dated 7/4/2009 5:09:06 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, ad.johnson@ntlworld…. writes:   Crop Circle depicts solar eruptions hitting Earth on July 7 July 3, 9:44 AM Comment Credit to Russell Stannard Copyright 2009. Crop Circle Connector A crop circle has appeared that researchers interpret to be a message that the Sun is about to emit five Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) that will hit the Earth on July 7. The crop circle first appeared at Milk Hill England on June 21 and has evolved over three stages up until June 30. Researchers interpreting the complex images in the crop circle believe these represent positions of planets that correspond to July 6 and 7 as dates when CMEs will hit the Earth. If so, this may be the first barrage of CMEs to hit the Earth in Solar Cycle 24. Importantly, scientists will be able to directly study the impacts of large amounts of solar plasma penetrating a breach in the magnetosphere first reported by NASA scientists in December 2008. cont: tinyurl. com/ld3rm8 A Good Credit Score is 700 or Above. See yours in just 2 easy steps!

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