[ RadSafe ] More fusion Geo microbiology of gold
parthasarathy k s
ksparth at yahoo.co.uk
Tue Jul 19 01:50:53 CDT 2011
Dear Joe Preisig,
The following discovery news on geomicrobiology of gold may be of interest to you. You may access it athttp://news.discovery.com/earth/gold-bacteria-nuggets.html
Regards
Parthasarathy
________________________________
From: "JPreisig at aol.com" <JPreisig at aol.com>
To: radsafe at health.phys.iit.edu
Sent: Monday, 18 July 2011, 22:12
Subject: [ RadSafe ] More fusion
Hi Radsafe,
Understanding fusion is probably like understanding how a car engine
operates.
Once someone explains how it works, then it makes much more sense. Then
once you replace the old
engine technology with fuel injectors etc,, everything becomes much more
clear.
Of course, maybe fusion has a chance of not working the way we want at all.
The morning TV news indicates a typhoon is headed towards the
Japanese problem nuclear plants.
Oh my.
For those of you in Canada's Northwest territories, gold and
diamonds are up there.
Sniff around a bit and stake your claim.
For those HP's in California, I might think of panning for gold
where signiificant panning has
already taken place, bearing the following information in mind. A book on
Physical Processes
of Sedimentation (by Middleton and Southard) might come in handy to
understanding how gold is
transported in a river. The gold just might travel downward to rock
layers just above bedrock.
Gold is heavy and falls out of a river quicker than the other rocks, sand
etc. Gold in water hitting a
big rock in the stream might just settle in right around such a rock.
Gold trapped under a big rock in a stream is probably likely to stay under such
a rock.
So, get on your hip waders, get your gold pan, and get started.
Bring your GM detector also????
The elements used in aneutronic fusion might not be quite so
plentiful as deuterium.
Regards, Joseph R. (Joe) Preisig
PS For those HP's living around Arkansas, there is a state park there
where one can dig through dirt
and occasionally find diamonds. A fee is charged for doing this.
Apparently Scion cars cost about 20K $. Scion is coming out with a
new electric car (all
electric). Wonder if it will cost 20K $ also. Guess the nuke plant down
the street will provide some
of the electricity for these cars.....
_______________________________________________
You are currently subscribed to the RadSafe mailing list
Before posting a message to RadSafe be sure to have read and understood the RadSafe rules. These can be found at: http://health.phys.iit.edu/radsaferules.html
For information on how to subscribe or unsubscribe and other settings visit: http://health.phys.iit.edu
More information about the RadSafe
mailing list