Sunday, August 11, 2013

The mystery of the Carolina Bays

A respected impact expert said that "it is fairly clear that the Carolina Bays have nothing to do with any kind of impact, no matter which type of projectile."  Yet, the wisdom of such a statement is questionable when you look at the multitude of elliptical bays with raised borders, all of which are aligned pointing toward the Great Lakes region.

How could all these elliptical depressions have been formed along the eastern coast of the United States?  An explanation that appears to account for all the properties of the Carolina Bays is a hypothesis that they were made by impacts of ice chunks ejected by the impact of a comet or asteroid on the ice sheet that covered North America during an ice age.  The evidence for this extraterrestrial impact consists of microscopic hexagonal diamonds which can only be formed at high pressure, but this has not been enough to convince the impact experts.  The extinction of the megafauna of North America, like the saber-tooth tiger, the Younger Dryas cooling interval which lasted for one thousand years after the proposed impact, and now the formation of the Carolina Bays from the impacts of the ejected glacier ice provide mounting evidence that there was an extraterrestrial impact on the ice sheet around the Great Lakes region.  Proving that the Carolina Bays are indeed impact structures may provide evidence that will firmly establish the occurrence of an extraterrestrial impact.


Saturday, April 03, 2010

We are fooled so easily

The Washington Post recently reported that species substitution is a growing crime in the food industry.  This is when you pay a premium price for red snapper, but instead you get Asian catfish or tilapia.  Most people cannot tell the difference once the fish has been cut into fillets.  When the fish is breaded or prepared in a manner that makes it hard to do a visual inspection, your chances of being able to tell the kind of fish is practically zero.  Government agencies have to use DNA sequencing to catch the crooks.  The ordinary consumer does not even know that he or she has been fooled.

Food manufacturers have also found it profitable to advertise low calorie or fat-free products that are not really low in calories or fat-free.  These products usually have better profit margins than products that do not make such claims.  You have to have a sharp eye and know how to read the food product labels to keep from getting cheated.  

Have you ever compared the taste of  "organic" lettuce to conventional lettuce?  Can you really taste the difference?  The chances are that nobody can really tell the difference between the two except through the label.  But can you trust the label?  Did somebody just call it "organic" and increase the price, or is it really organic?  You have to trust, and hope that the claim is true.  You cannot really know for sure unless you have a chemical laboratory that can test for pesticide residues, or unless you can monitor the fields where the lettuce is grown and oversee the delivery from the field to your table.  We can be fooled easily because we do not have the resources necessary to verify the claims.

Sunday, October 08, 2006

RemoteViewing

I came across a web site that for $98 Dollars will sell you six cassette tapes to teach "remote viewing". For those who don't know, remote viewing is a technique to access subconscious and universal mind information in space and time so that present, past, and future events are revealed. Although this sounds like it came out of a Harry Potter film, the techniques are supposedly used by spy agencies of various countries.

I am convinced that by paying close attention to our perceptions and by using our power of deduction we can have a greater awareness of our surroundings and could even make some insightful predictions. However, remote viewing seems to be a fancy way of doing thought experiments, or brainstorming about something that you know nothing about. Any "findings" produced through remote viewing without observations or background knowledge cannot be much better than wild guesses.

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

Cheese from Gerovar

Not far from Bern, in the Swiss Alps, there is a remote region called Gerovar. The locals consider it a republic and nobody has challenged them about this because there are so few inhabitants in the area. Besides, the mountains make it impossible to build roads, so ideas and culture cannot easily travel to or from this area. The terrain is ideal for goats. Guess what? The Republic of Gerovar's main product is goat cheese. Swiss goat cheese.

I learned about this wonderful land from Madame Flora, who is a native of the region. Unfortunately, I have not had a chance to taste the delicious cheese because it is not exported, but I am assured that it is the best in the world. It is not everyday that you learn about a new country right in your own backyard, but if you look hard, it may be possible. In some U.S. cities, you are more likely to find Indian curry, Italian pizza, or Mexican tacos in your local shopping mall than whatever might be considered typical American food.

Friday, September 08, 2006

Madame Flora

Madame Flora made her debut in cyberspace on September 1st, 2006. Madame Flora is a highly gifted psychic advisor with a B.S. degree in Occult Sciences from the University of Gerovar. As a community service, Madame Flora volunteers by giving sagely advice to the lost souls that surf the internet in search of someone who will guide them through the problems of life. Madame Flora is featured exclusively in the Scientific Psychic web site. She telecommutes from an offshore location.

Visit Madame Flora Madame Flora

Saturday, August 26, 2006

Ideological beasts

Humans are becoming their own worst enemies because of ideological differences. We have gone beyond the basic need for food, shelter, and mates into an ideological dimension that acquires a greater importance than reality. Our imagined worlds are so credible and so appealing that any amount of suffering in this world can be considered unimportant.

There have always been selfless acts of heroism in times of need. The people who sacrificed their lives sealing the Chernobyl reactor to keep it from spewing radioactivity come to mind. They died so that others might live.

The images coming out of the Middle East are less comprehensible: Suicide bombers whose only purpose is to kill as many other people as possible without a rational goal in mind. Hate is being taught on a large scale. Young people who have not seen the world chant and believe that "Death to America" and "Death to Israel" are worthwhile goals. Memories of the injustices of prior wars, the Halocaust, the crusades, and the oppression by the Roman Empire become tools to keep young, innocent people engaged in struggles that will never end because they are never allowed to forget and, therefore, they can never forgive.

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Psychic predictions

A reader inquired if I am really psychic. I KNEW that I was going to be asked that, therefore, I must be psychic.
People want reassurance. Even mature people want to hear the motherly advice: "Don't cry. Everything will be all right".
If you know what will happen, you can plan and improve your chances of handling the situation better than if you were unprepared. This is why even a prediction of bad things to come, which on the surface cannot make you happy, may actually prepare you to face future problems.
Suppose that I predicted a financial hardship in your future. Wouldn't this make you think about your current financial position? Sure, it would. You would assess your debts, sources of income, resources at your disposal, risky investments, etc. If you believed my prediction, you would sell your risky investments and reduce your debt to prepare to meet the predicted hardship.
Even if the prediction was pulled out of the air and not by the use of miraculous psychic powers, it had the effect of making you think about your future and help you to organize your financial situation.

How much can you rely on your senses?


Reality is the result of our perceptions as interpreted by our brain.

If you don't believe it, here is the proof: A simple checkerboard consisting of black and white squares. There are no curved lines in the picture.

Why do we see curved lines and what appears to be a bulge in the center of the picture? The picture elements combine to create crossed diagonal lines which interfere with our perception of the straight horizontal and vertical lines. Squint to see the diagonal lines that form a cross in the middle.

If you still do not believe that there are no curved lines, take a ruler and check the edges. Even after we understand that there are no curved lines, we still see the curved lines. That is reality.