My newest sphere is one Effie would appreciate—a banded iron formation piece. Probably around 2 billion years old, this type of rock was common before the atmosphere was oxygenated. It’s a lovely little piece of history.
Whoa! Very cool! Quite beautiful, too.
Double wow, as Paul would say. What’s the story behind such a gem?
On May 11, 2018, at 7:50 PM, Bruce Jividen kundar@gmail.com wrote:
My newest sphere is one Effie would appreciate—a banded iron formation piece. Probably around 2 billion years old, this type of rock was common before the atmosphere was oxygenated. It’s a lovely little piece of history.
<IMG_0127.jpg>
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
It is quite cool. Bruce let me hold it and I wasn't limited to seeing it behind glass in a museum. And I had to keep reminding myself that it is two *m*illion with a *b!*
On Fri, May 11, 2018 at 11:44 PM Chuck S chucksim@mindspring.com wrote:
Whoa! Very cool! Quite beautiful, too.
Double wow, as Paul would say. What’s the story behind such a gem?
On May 11, 2018, at 7:50 PM, Bruce Jividen kundar@gmail.com wrote:
My newest sphere is one Effie would appreciate—a banded iron formation
piece. Probably around 2 billion years old, this type of rock was common before the atmosphere was oxygenated. It’s a lovely little piece of history.
<IMG_0127.jpg>
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
On which interplanetary journey you and Luna took did you acquire it?
________________________________ From: UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Bruce Jividen kundar@gmail.com Sent: Saturday, May 12, 2018 1:50 AM To: Under the Stars Subject: [UTS] Sphere
My newest sphere is one Effie would appreciate—a banded iron formation piece. Probably around 2 billion years old, this type of rock was common before the atmosphere was oxygenated. It’s a lovely little piece of history.
[cid:16352e508d69743d5a1]
This past Tue when Bruce and Luna went off-world to Amazon IV in the Alpha Centauri star system. Free shipping because he picked it up himself.
I think.
On Sat, May 12, 2018 at 10:31 AM Effie in the desert wadesert@hotmail.com wrote:
On which *interplanetary* journey you and Luna took did you acquire it?
*From:* UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Bruce Jividen < kundar@gmail.com> *Sent:* Saturday, May 12, 2018 1:50 AM *To:* Under the Stars *Subject:* [UTS] Sphere
My newest sphere is one Effie would appreciate—a banded iron formation piece. Probably around 2 billion years old, this type of rock was common before the atmosphere was oxygenated. It’s a lovely little piece of history.
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
And he did it on one tank of gas!
On May 12, 2018, at 6:25 PM, Todd Andrews taa@pobox.com wrote:
This past Tue when Bruce and Luna went off-world to Amazon IV in the Alpha Centauri star system. Free shipping because he picked it up himself.
I think.
On Sat, May 12, 2018 at 10:31 AM Effie in the desert wadesert@hotmail.com wrote: On which interplanetary journey you and Luna took did you acquire it?
From: UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Bruce Jividen kundar@gmail.com Sent: Saturday, May 12, 2018 1:50 AM To: Under the Stars Subject: [UTS] Sphere
My newest sphere is one Effie would appreciate—a banded iron formation piece. Probably around 2 billion years old, this type of rock was common before the atmosphere was oxygenated. It’s a lovely little piece of history.
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
Because going home he switched to sphere power....
On May 12, 2018, at 6:29 PM, Chuck S chucksim@mindspring.com wrote:
And he did it on one tank of gas!
On May 12, 2018, at 6:25 PM, Todd Andrews taa@pobox.com wrote:
This past Tue when Bruce and Luna went off-world to Amazon IV in the Alpha Centauri star system. Free shipping because he picked it up himself.
I think.
On Sat, May 12, 2018 at 10:31 AM Effie in the desert wadesert@hotmail.com wrote: On which interplanetary journey you and Luna took did you acquire it?
From: UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Bruce Jividen kundar@gmail.com Sent: Saturday, May 12, 2018 1:50 AM To: Under the Stars Subject: [UTS] Sphere
My newest sphere is one Effie would appreciate—a banded iron formation piece. Probably around 2 billion years old, this type of rock was common before the atmosphere was oxygenated. It’s a lovely little piece of history.
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
SpaceX is so old news now. (Nice ones, Chuck!)
On Sat, May 12, 2018 at 9:31 PM Chuck S chucksim@mindspring.com wrote:
Because going home he switched to sphere power....
On May 12, 2018, at 6:29 PM, Chuck S chucksim@mindspring.com wrote:
And he did it on one tank of gas!
On May 12, 2018, at 6:25 PM, Todd Andrews taa@pobox.com wrote:
This past Tue when Bruce and Luna went off-world to Amazon IV in the Alpha Centauri star system. Free shipping because he picked it up himself.
I think.
On Sat, May 12, 2018 at 10:31 AM Effie in the desert wadesert@hotmail.com wrote:
On which *interplanetary* journey you and Luna took did you acquire it?
*From:* UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Bruce Jividen < kundar@gmail.com> *Sent:* Saturday, May 12, 2018 1:50 AM *To:* Under the Stars *Subject:* [UTS] Sphere
My newest sphere is one Effie would appreciate—a banded iron formation piece. Probably around 2 billion years old, this type of rock was common before the atmosphere was oxygenated. It’s a lovely little piece of history.
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
The needle never came close to "E".
(I wish I could better remember that line from the movie...)
________________________________ From: UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Chuck S chucksim@mindspring.com Sent: Sunday, May 13, 2018 12:29 AM To: Under the Stars Subject: Re: [UTS] Sphere
And he did it on one tank of gas!
On May 12, 2018, at 6:25 PM, Todd Andrews <taa@pobox.commailto:taa@pobox.com> wrote:
This past Tue when Bruce and Luna went off-world to Amazon IV in the Alpha Centauri star system. Free shipping because he picked it up himself.
I think.
On Sat, May 12, 2018 at 10:31 AM Effie in the desert <wadesert@hotmail.commailto:wadesert@hotmail.com> wrote:
On which interplanetary journey you and Luna took did you acquire it?
________________________________ From: UTS <uts-bounces@starmanet.commailto:uts-bounces@starmanet.com> on behalf of Bruce Jividen <kundar@gmail.commailto:kundar@gmail.com> Sent: Saturday, May 12, 2018 1:50 AM To: Under the Stars Subject: [UTS] Sphere
My newest sphere is one Effie would appreciate—a banded iron formation piece. Probably around 2 billion years old, this type of rock was common before the atmosphere was oxygenated. It’s a lovely little piece of history.
[cid:16352e508d69743d5a1]
_______________________________________________ UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.commailto:UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com _______________________________________________ UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.commailto:UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
Let’s see, E=M(C squared). So 5000 pounds x the speed of light squared x the distance from Amazon IV to Earth....Yeah, that new sphere packs a heap of energy.
BTW, We all know Luna has a Mercedes nameplate, but that’s just to disguise it’s true identity from the FSA: http://www.forestriverinc.com/class-c-motorhomes/forester
On May 12, 2018, at 6:59 PM, Effie in the desert wadesert@hotmail.com wrote:
The needle never came close to "E".
(I wish I could better remember that line from the movie...)
From: UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Chuck S chucksim@mindspring.com Sent: Sunday, May 13, 2018 12:29 AM To: Under the Stars Subject: Re: [UTS] Sphere
And he did it on one tank of gas!
On May 12, 2018, at 6:25 PM, Todd Andrews taa@pobox.com wrote:
This past Tue when Bruce and Luna went off-world to Amazon IV in the Alpha Centauri star system. Free shipping because he picked it up himself.
I think.
On Sat, May 12, 2018 at 10:31 AM Effie in the desert wadesert@hotmail.com wrote: On which interplanetary journey you and Luna took did you acquire it?
From: UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Bruce Jividen kundar@gmail.com Sent: Saturday, May 12, 2018 1:50 AM To: Under the Stars Subject: [UTS] Sphere
My newest sphere is one Effie would appreciate—a banded iron formation piece. Probably around 2 billion years old, this type of rock was common before the atmosphere was oxygenated. It’s a lovely little piece of history.
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com _______________________________________________ UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
All this talk about Amazon IV and lightspeed does make one wonder just what secrets might be hiding in this sphere of rock. Let's see what Starman says about it!
THE IRON SPHERE
By Bruce R. Jividen 5/13/2018
Paul was folding clothes when the door opened and Scott came in. Now in his senior year of high school, Scott was taller, lankier and hungrier than when Paul first met him four years ago. So not surprisingly, he tossed his backpack on the couch and headed straight for the fridge to find a snack.
“How’d school go?” Paul asked. Scott had recently been given an assignment to write about a period of the Earth’s history and create a visual display such as a diorama or poster. His teacher, Mr. Nelson, had randomly distributed different time periods amongst the class, and Scott had ended up with the Siderian period of the Paleoprotozoic, a unit of time two-point-three to two billion years ago.
At the time Scott had complained to Paul that while some of his classmates were getting to write about dinosaurs and wooly mammoths, Scott was stuck with a much less interesting time in history—in fact, some geologists had dismissed it as the “boring billion”—due to the lack of anything major happening in its duration.
“I’m sure you can find a way to make it interesting,” Paul had said cryptically, which Scott had dismissed in typical teenage fashion.
Now as Scott was making himself a sandwich, Paul gingerly breached the subject again. “So, how’s the geology report coming along?”
Scott was just putting the ham and mayo back in the fridge and his face brightened up. “Oh…I found something really cool! I think I can make this work after all. And wait until you see it!” He ravenously chowed down on his sandwich as he sauntered back over to his discarded backpack, then put the half-eaten sandwich on the coffee table. Unzipping one of the back flaps of his bag, he fished around inside with his hand. He brought out something that was wrapped in a paper towel and handed it to Paul.
Paul unwrapped it and his face registered astonishment. “What is this? It’s beautiful.”
“It’s a sphere, obviously. But this one is made of banded iron formation, a type of rock from my time period! It’ll be a great hands-on addition to my poster.”
Paul lifted the sphere up close to his eyes and gazed in wonder at the layered bands of dull grey and muted dark red that were a hallmark of this type of rock.
Scott got his notes out. “There was no oxygen in the Earth’s atmosphere at the time, and the only life was single cell organisms that lived in the ocean. As they produced oxygen from photosynthesis, it would react with the iron dissolved in the water, kind of like how rust happens in air.” He paused. “The oxygenated iron particles can’t dissolve in water so they precipitated down to the bottom. Vast fields of this iron accumulated in horizontal layers over long periods of time. The grey layers are the iron, and the red layers are other sediments that occurred in between blooms of these organisms, as would happen during summer and winter seasons. So that rock isn’t just pretty, it’s a signature of life.”
“Where did you find this?” Paul asked excitedly.
“The crystal shop, you know, the one owned by that eccentric older lady, Mrs. Smith?”
“I’ve driven by there before, but I don’t think I ever went in.”
“I asked her if she had anything from this time period and she just happened to have gotten this sphere in last week. It wasn’t even that expensive. She was telling me that she’s a Theosophist and that there’s so much we don’t know about history and how it affects the universe. She mentioned something I had to look up called the ‘Akashic records.’” Scott flipped his page over. “The basic idea is that all events are encoded in a non-physical plane of existence. A lot of bunk, I’m sure…but the rock sure is cool!”
Paul lowered the iron sphere and looked at Scott. “It’s true that a lot of the spiritual traditions on this planet don’t have a scientific basis, but most of them have some nugget of truth in them.”
Scott’s eyes grew wide. “Are you saying that these Akashic Records exist?” He picked up the sandwich again and bit a big chunk off.
“Probably not the way Mrs. Smith and her fellow beings believe, but yes—the experiences of an atom do leave imprints in spacetime that Earth science is not advanced enough to detect yet.”
Scott swallowed his bite of sandwich hard enough to make an audible “gulp.” He sat down across from Paul. “Whoa.”
Paul got his Algieban sphere out. “Here, I’ll show you.” He activated the silvery orb and its blue light filled the room. It grew bright enough that Scott had to squint and then finally shut his eyes. When he opened them again, it seemed as though he was no longer in their living room.
He was on the seashore, and the sun was setting over the ocean. He looked away from the horizon, at the barren outcrops of rock that rose from where he stood. “What is this?”
“An illusion, of course,” Paul said. “We couldn’t actually be here.”
“I hope not,” Scott said. “We wouldn’t live for more than a few minutes in this atmosphere. Hey, that’s a good line for my poster.” He looked up. “WHOA!”
“This is two billion years ago, remember,” Paul replied, after following Scott’s gaze. “The moon was much closer to the Earth at this time.”
“I can grasp that…intellectually. But seeing it like this…it’s stunning. I’ll have to draw this for my poster.” He looked down again at the sea. “Why is it green?”
“That green, Scott, is you, and Mrs. Smith, and everything else that will someday live on this world. Those are the organisms creating the rocks whose memory we are looking at now.”
“This is amazing,” Scott said after a big inhale of breath.
“Not so boring after all, eh?” Paul said. The sound of the sphere died away, and with it, the vision of the past, and they were once again in the normality of their living room.
“I wish I could have that in my geology project,” Scott lamented. “How long will it be before we can do that?”
“Hard to say,” Paul opined. “I’m sure you’ll start having virtual realities soon enough. The reading of the spacetime vibrations is still far beyond what humans are capable of…for now.”
“Look at how far we’ve come though, Dad. It’s incredible to think about.”
“Indeed, Scott, indeed. And humanity is just getting started. You should have some good material you can put into your project though.”
“Absolutely. I’m going to win with my presentation now. I’m actually excited about this supposedly boring piece of history.”
“Good,” Paul said. “I guess I’d better start dinner because I’m sure that sandwich was just an hors d’oeuvre. I’ll need to go to the grocery store— again.”
Scott shrugged. “Creativity makes me hungry, Dad.”
“I think everything makes you hungry, Scott. But stay creative, I have the feeling you’ll be a teacher someday. There’s a lot more out there to learn.”
On Sat, May 12, 2018 at 10:25 PM Chuck S chucksim@mindspring.com wrote:
Let’s see, E=M(C squared). So 5000 pounds x the speed of light squared x the distance from Amazon IV to Earth....Yeah, that new sphere packs a heap of energy.
BTW, We all know Luna has a Mercedes nameplate, but that’s just to disguise it’s true identity from the FSA: http://www.forestriverinc.com/class-c-motorhomes/forester
On May 12, 2018, at 6:59 PM, Effie in the desert wadesert@hotmail.com wrote:
The needle never came close to "E".
(I wish I could better remember that line from the movie...)
*From:* UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Chuck S < chucksim@mindspring.com> *Sent:* Sunday, May 13, 2018 12:29 AM *To:* Under the Stars *Subject:* Re: [UTS] Sphere
And he did it on one tank of gas!
On May 12, 2018, at 6:25 PM, Todd Andrews taa@pobox.com wrote:
This past Tue when Bruce and Luna went off-world to Amazon IV in the Alpha Centauri star system. Free shipping because he picked it up himself.
I think.
On Sat, May 12, 2018 at 10:31 AM Effie in the desert wadesert@hotmail.com wrote:
On which *interplanetary* journey you and Luna took did you acquire it?
*From:* UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Bruce Jividen < kundar@gmail.com> *Sent:* Saturday, May 12, 2018 1:50 AM *To:* Under the Stars *Subject:* [UTS] Sphere
My newest sphere is one Effie would appreciate—a banded iron formation piece. Probably around 2 billion years old, this type of rock was common before the atmosphere was oxygenated. It’s a lovely little piece of history.
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
Knew there was a story behind that rock! And what a fun story it was.
By the way, in Nina’s and my universe, Scott indeed becomes a professor and Astro-physicist at the University of Colorado in Boulder where he wins the Nobel Prize for his work on 3D mapping of the universe, proving the existence of dark matter. His son is on the US Olympic Swimming Team training in Colorado Springs.
On May 13, 2018, at 10:51 PM, Bruce Jividen kundar@gmail.com wrote:
All this talk about Amazon IV and lightspeed does make one wonder just what secrets might be hiding in this sphere of rock. Let's see what Starman says about it!
THE IRON SPHERE By Bruce R. Jividen 5/13/2018
Paul was folding clothes when the door opened and Scott came in. Now in his senior year of high school, Scott was taller, lankier and hungrier than when Paul first met him four years ago. So not surprisingly, he tossed his backpack on the couch and headed straight for the fridge to find a snack.
“How’d school go?” Paul asked. Scott had recently been given an assignment to write about a period of the Earth’s history and create a visual display such as a diorama or poster. His teacher, Mr. Nelson, had randomly distributed different time periods amongst the class, and Scott had ended up with the Siderian period of the Paleoprotozoic, a unit of time two-point-three to two billion years ago.
At the time Scott had complained to Paul that while some of his classmates were getting to write about dinosaurs and wooly mammoths, Scott was stuck with a much less interesting time in history—in fact, some geologists had dismissed it as the “boring billion”—due to the lack of anything major happening in its duration.
“I’m sure you can find a way to make it interesting,” Paul had said cryptically, which Scott had dismissed in typical teenage fashion.
Now as Scott was making himself a sandwich, Paul gingerly breached the subject again. “So, how’s the geology report coming along?”
Scott was just putting the ham and mayo back in the fridge and his face brightened up. “Oh…I found something really cool! I think I can make this work after all. And wait until you see it!” He ravenously chowed down on his sandwich as he sauntered back over to his discarded backpack, then put the half-eaten sandwich on the coffee table. Unzipping one of the back flaps of his bag, he fished around inside with his hand. He brought out something that was wrapped in a paper towel and handed it to Paul.
Paul unwrapped it and his face registered astonishment. “What is this? It’s beautiful.”
“It’s a sphere, obviously. But this one is made of banded iron formation, a type of rock from my time period! It’ll be a great hands-on addition to my poster.”
Paul lifted the sphere up close to his eyes and gazed in wonder at the layered bands of dull grey and muted dark red that were a hallmark of this type of rock.
Scott got his notes out. “There was no oxygen in the Earth’s atmosphere at the time, and the only life was single cell organisms that lived in the ocean. As they produced oxygen from photosynthesis, it would react with the iron dissolved in the water, kind of like how rust happens in air.” He paused. “The oxygenated iron particles can’t dissolve in water so they precipitated down to the bottom. Vast fields of this iron accumulated in horizontal layers over long periods of time. The grey layers are the iron, and the red layers are other sediments that occurred in between blooms of these organisms, as would happen during summer and winter seasons. So that rock isn’t just pretty, it’s a signature of life.”
“Where did you find this?” Paul asked excitedly.
“The crystal shop, you know, the one owned by that eccentric older lady, Mrs. Smith?”
“I’ve driven by there before, but I don’t think I ever went in.”
“I asked her if she had anything from this time period and she just happened to have gotten this sphere in last week. It wasn’t even that expensive. She was telling me that she’s a Theosophist and that there’s so much we don’t know about history and how it affects the universe. She mentioned something I had to look up called the ‘Akashic records.’” Scott flipped his page over. “The basic idea is that all events are encoded in a non-physical plane of existence. A lot of bunk, I’m sure…but the rock sure is cool!”
Paul lowered the iron sphere and looked at Scott. “It’s true that a lot of the spiritual traditions on this planet don’t have a scientific basis, but most of them have some nugget of truth in them.”
Scott’s eyes grew wide. “Are you saying that these Akashic Records exist?” He picked up the sandwich again and bit a big chunk off.
“Probably not the way Mrs. Smith and her fellow beings believe, but yes—the experiences of an atom do leave imprints in spacetime that Earth science is not advanced enough to detect yet.”
Scott swallowed his bite of sandwich hard enough to make an audible “gulp.” He sat down across from Paul. “Whoa.”
Paul got his Algieban sphere out. “Here, I’ll show you.” He activated the silvery orb and its blue light filled the room. It grew bright enough that Scott had to squint and then finally shut his eyes. When he opened them again, it seemed as though he was no longer in their living room.
He was on the seashore, and the sun was setting over the ocean. He looked away from the horizon, at the barren outcrops of rock that rose from where he stood. “What is this?”
“An illusion, of course,” Paul said. “We couldn’t actually be here.”
“I hope not,” Scott said. “We wouldn’t live for more than a few minutes in this atmosphere. Hey, that’s a good line for my poster.” He looked up. “WHOA!”
“This is two billion years ago, remember,” Paul replied, after following Scott’s gaze. “The moon was much closer to the Earth at this time.”
“I can grasp that…intellectually. But seeing it like this…it’s stunning. I’ll have to draw this for my poster.” He looked down again at the sea. “Why is it green?”
“That green, Scott, is you, and Mrs. Smith, and everything else that will someday live on this world. Those are the organisms creating the rocks whose memory we are looking at now.”
“This is amazing,” Scott said after a big inhale of breath.
“Not so boring after all, eh?” Paul said. The sound of the sphere died away, and with it, the vision of the past, and they were once again in the normality of their living room.
“I wish I could have that in my geology project,” Scott lamented. “How long will it be before we can do that?”
“Hard to say,” Paul opined. “I’m sure you’ll start having virtual realities soon enough. The reading of the spacetime vibrations is still far beyond what humans are capable of…for now.”
“Look at how far we’ve come though, Dad. It’s incredible to think about.”
“Indeed, Scott, indeed. And humanity is just getting started. You should have some good material you can put into your project though.”
“Absolutely. I’m going to win with my presentation now. I’m actually excited about this supposedly boring piece of history.”
“Good,” Paul said. “I guess I’d better start dinner because I’m sure that sandwich was just an hors d’oeuvre. I’ll need to go to the grocery store—again.”
Scott shrugged. “Creativity makes me hungry, Dad.”
“I think everything makes you hungry, Scott. But stay creative, I have the feeling you’ll be a teacher someday. There’s a lot more out there to learn.”
On Sat, May 12, 2018 at 10:25 PM Chuck S chucksim@mindspring.com wrote: Let’s see, E=M(C squared). So 5000 pounds x the speed of light squared x the distance from Amazon IV to Earth....Yeah, that new sphere packs a heap of energy.
BTW, We all know Luna has a Mercedes nameplate, but that’s just to disguise it’s true identity from the FSA: http://www.forestriverinc.com/class-c-motorhomes/forester
On May 12, 2018, at 6:59 PM, Effie in the desert wadesert@hotmail.com wrote:
The needle never came close to "E".
(I wish I could better remember that line from the movie...)
From: UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Chuck S chucksim@mindspring.com Sent: Sunday, May 13, 2018 12:29 AM To: Under the Stars Subject: Re: [UTS] Sphere
And he did it on one tank of gas!
On May 12, 2018, at 6:25 PM, Todd Andrews taa@pobox.com wrote:
This past Tue when Bruce and Luna went off-world to Amazon IV in the Alpha Centauri star system. Free shipping because he picked it up himself.
I think.
On Sat, May 12, 2018 at 10:31 AM Effie in the desert wadesert@hotmail.com wrote: On which interplanetary journey you and Luna took did you acquire it?
From: UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Bruce Jividen kundar@gmail.com Sent: Saturday, May 12, 2018 1:50 AM To: Under the Stars Subject: [UTS] Sphere
My newest sphere is one Effie would appreciate—a banded iron formation piece. Probably around 2 billion years old, this type of rock was common before the atmosphere was oxygenated. It’s a lovely little piece of history.
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com _______________________________________________ UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
Given the current disarray around dark matter, I'd definitely say that anyone who solves that is getting a Nobel!
The favorite for a long time has been something called a Weakly Interactive Massive Particle (or WIMP), but since a number of WIMP detectors have found nothing so far, physicists are starting to think about alternatives. (And there are a lot!) https://physics.aps.org/articles/v11/48
[image: e48_1.png]
On Mon, May 14, 2018 at 9:14 AM Chuck S chucksim@mindspring.com wrote:
Knew there was a story behind that rock! And what a fun story it was.
By the way, in Nina’s and my universe, Scott indeed becomes a professor and Astro-physicist at the University of Colorado in Boulder where he wins the Nobel Prize for his work on 3D mapping of the universe, proving the existence of dark matter. His son is on the US Olympic Swimming Team training in Colorado Springs.
On May 13, 2018, at 10:51 PM, Bruce Jividen kundar@gmail.com wrote:
All this talk about Amazon IV and lightspeed does make one wonder just what secrets might be hiding in this sphere of rock. Let's see what Starman says about it!
THE IRON SPHERE
By Bruce R. Jividen 5/13/2018
Paul was folding clothes when the door opened and Scott came in. Now in his senior year of high school, Scott was taller, lankier and hungrier than when Paul first met him four years ago. So not surprisingly, he tossed his backpack on the couch and headed straight for the fridge to find a snack.
“How’d school go?” Paul asked. Scott had recently been given an assignment to write about a period of the Earth’s history and create a visual display such as a diorama or poster. His teacher, Mr. Nelson, had randomly distributed different time periods amongst the class, and Scott had ended up with the Siderian period of the Paleoprotozoic, a unit of time two-point-three to two billion years ago.
At the time Scott had complained to Paul that while some of his classmates were getting to write about dinosaurs and wooly mammoths, Scott was stuck with a much less interesting time in history—in fact, some geologists had dismissed it as the “boring billion”—due to the lack of anything major happening in its duration.
“I’m sure you can find a way to make it interesting,” Paul had said cryptically, which Scott had dismissed in typical teenage fashion.
Now as Scott was making himself a sandwich, Paul gingerly breached the subject again. “So, how’s the geology report coming along?”
Scott was just putting the ham and mayo back in the fridge and his face brightened up. “Oh…I found something really cool! I think I can make this work after all. And wait until you see it!” He ravenously chowed down on his sandwich as he sauntered back over to his discarded backpack, then put the half-eaten sandwich on the coffee table. Unzipping one of the back flaps of his bag, he fished around inside with his hand. He brought out something that was wrapped in a paper towel and handed it to Paul.
Paul unwrapped it and his face registered astonishment. “What is this? It’s beautiful.”
“It’s a sphere, obviously. But this one is made of banded iron formation, a type of rock from my time period! It’ll be a great hands-on addition to my poster.”
Paul lifted the sphere up close to his eyes and gazed in wonder at the layered bands of dull grey and muted dark red that were a hallmark of this type of rock.
Scott got his notes out. “There was no oxygen in the Earth’s atmosphere at the time, and the only life was single cell organisms that lived in the ocean. As they produced oxygen from photosynthesis, it would react with the iron dissolved in the water, kind of like how rust happens in air.” He paused. “The oxygenated iron particles can’t dissolve in water so they precipitated down to the bottom. Vast fields of this iron accumulated in horizontal layers over long periods of time. The grey layers are the iron, and the red layers are other sediments that occurred in between blooms of these organisms, as would happen during summer and winter seasons. So that rock isn’t just pretty, it’s a signature of life.”
“Where did you find this?” Paul asked excitedly.
“The crystal shop, you know, the one owned by that eccentric older lady, Mrs. Smith?”
“I’ve driven by there before, but I don’t think I ever went in.”
“I asked her if she had anything from this time period and she just happened to have gotten this sphere in last week. It wasn’t even that expensive. She was telling me that she’s a Theosophist and that there’s so much we don’t know about history and how it affects the universe. She mentioned something I had to look up called the ‘Akashic records.’” Scott flipped his page over. “The basic idea is that all events are encoded in a non-physical plane of existence. A lot of bunk, I’m sure…but the rock sure is cool!”
Paul lowered the iron sphere and looked at Scott. “It’s true that a lot of the spiritual traditions on this planet don’t have a scientific basis, but most of them have some nugget of truth in them.”
Scott’s eyes grew wide. “Are you saying that these Akashic Records exist?” He picked up the sandwich again and bit a big chunk off.
“Probably not the way Mrs. Smith and her fellow beings believe, but yes—the experiences of an atom do leave imprints in spacetime that Earth science is not advanced enough to detect yet.”
Scott swallowed his bite of sandwich hard enough to make an audible “gulp.” He sat down across from Paul. “Whoa.”
Paul got his Algieban sphere out. “Here, I’ll show you.” He activated the silvery orb and its blue light filled the room. It grew bright enough that Scott had to squint and then finally shut his eyes. When he opened them again, it seemed as though he was no longer in their living room.
He was on the seashore, and the sun was setting over the ocean. He looked away from the horizon, at the barren outcrops of rock that rose from where he stood. “What is this?”
“An illusion, of course,” Paul said. “We couldn’t actually be here.”
“I hope not,” Scott said. “We wouldn’t live for more than a few minutes in this atmosphere. Hey, that’s a good line for my poster.” He looked up. “WHOA!”
“This is two billion years ago, remember,” Paul replied, after following Scott’s gaze. “The moon was much closer to the Earth at this time.”
“I can grasp that…intellectually. But seeing it like this…it’s stunning. I’ll have to draw this for my poster.” He looked down again at the sea. “Why is it green?”
“That green, Scott, is you, and Mrs. Smith, and everything else that will someday live on this world. Those are the organisms creating the rocks whose memory we are looking at now.”
“This is amazing,” Scott said after a big inhale of breath.
“Not so boring after all, eh?” Paul said. The sound of the sphere died away, and with it, the vision of the past, and they were once again in the normality of their living room.
“I wish I could have that in my geology project,” Scott lamented. “How long will it be before we can do that?”
“Hard to say,” Paul opined. “I’m sure you’ll start having virtual realities soon enough. The reading of the spacetime vibrations is still far beyond what humans are capable of…for now.”
“Look at how far we’ve come though, Dad. It’s incredible to think about.”
“Indeed, Scott, indeed. And humanity is just getting started. You should have some good material you can put into your project though.”
“Absolutely. I’m going to win with my presentation now. I’m actually excited about this supposedly boring piece of history.”
“Good,” Paul said. “I guess I’d better start dinner because I’m sure that sandwich was just an hors d’oeuvre. I’ll need to go to the grocery store— again.”
Scott shrugged. “Creativity makes me hungry, Dad.”
“I think everything makes you hungry, Scott. But stay creative, I have the feeling you’ll be a teacher someday. There’s a lot more out there to learn.”
On Sat, May 12, 2018 at 10:25 PM Chuck S chucksim@mindspring.com wrote:
Let’s see, E=M(C squared). So 5000 pounds x the speed of light squared x the distance from Amazon IV to Earth....Yeah, that new sphere packs a heap of energy.
BTW, We all know Luna has a Mercedes nameplate, but that’s just to disguise it’s true identity from the FSA: http://www.forestriverinc.com/class-c-motorhomes/forester
On May 12, 2018, at 6:59 PM, Effie in the desert wadesert@hotmail.com wrote:
The needle never came close to "E".
(I wish I could better remember that line from the movie...)
*From:* UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Chuck S < chucksim@mindspring.com> *Sent:* Sunday, May 13, 2018 12:29 AM *To:* Under the Stars *Subject:* Re: [UTS] Sphere
And he did it on one tank of gas!
On May 12, 2018, at 6:25 PM, Todd Andrews taa@pobox.com wrote:
This past Tue when Bruce and Luna went off-world to Amazon IV in the Alpha Centauri star system. Free shipping because he picked it up himself.
I think.
On Sat, May 12, 2018 at 10:31 AM Effie in the desert < wadesert@hotmail.com> wrote:
On which *interplanetary* journey you and Luna took did you acquire it?
*From:* UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Bruce Jividen < kundar@gmail.com> *Sent:* Saturday, May 12, 2018 1:50 AM *To:* Under the Stars *Subject:* [UTS] Sphere
My newest sphere is one Effie would appreciate—a banded iron formation piece. Probably around 2 billion years old, this type of rock was common before the atmosphere was oxygenated. It’s a lovely little piece of history.
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
Good comprehensive graphic. There are more theories than I thought. This is a real life project I heard about when touring Fermi Labs near Chicago. They built the camera and mounted it on the telescope in Chile. Scott’s just following in the family map making business, while Paul’s grandson continues the StarFamily’s athletic prowess.
On May 14, 2018, at 6:20 PM, Bruce Jividen kundar@gmail.com wrote:
Given the current disarray around dark matter, I'd definitely say that anyone who solves that is getting a Nobel!
The favorite for a long time has been something called a Weakly Interactive Massive Particle (or WIMP), but since a number of WIMP detectors have found nothing so far, physicists are starting to think about alternatives. (And there are a lot!) https://physics.aps.org/articles/v11/48
<e48_1.png>
On Mon, May 14, 2018 at 9:14 AM Chuck S chucksim@mindspring.com wrote: Knew there was a story behind that rock! And what a fun story it was.
By the way, in Nina’s and my universe, Scott indeed becomes a professor and Astro-physicist at the University of Colorado in Boulder where he wins the Nobel Prize for his work on 3D mapping of the universe, proving the existence of dark matter. His son is on the US Olympic Swimming Team training in Colorado Springs.
On May 13, 2018, at 10:51 PM, Bruce Jividen kundar@gmail.com wrote:
All this talk about Amazon IV and lightspeed does make one wonder just what secrets might be hiding in this sphere of rock. Let's see what Starman says about it!
THE IRON SPHERE By Bruce R. Jividen 5/13/2018
Paul was folding clothes when the door opened and Scott came in. Now in his senior year of high school, Scott was taller, lankier and hungrier than when Paul first met him four years ago. So not surprisingly, he tossed his backpack on the couch and headed straight for the fridge to find a snack.
“How’d school go?” Paul asked. Scott had recently been given an assignment to write about a period of the Earth’s history and create a visual display such as a diorama or poster. His teacher, Mr. Nelson, had randomly distributed different time periods amongst the class, and Scott had ended up with the Siderian period of the Paleoprotozoic, a unit of time two-point-three to two billion years ago.
At the time Scott had complained to Paul that while some of his classmates were getting to write about dinosaurs and wooly mammoths, Scott was stuck with a much less interesting time in history—in fact, some geologists had dismissed it as the “boring billion”—due to the lack of anything major happening in its duration.
“I’m sure you can find a way to make it interesting,” Paul had said cryptically, which Scott had dismissed in typical teenage fashion.
Now as Scott was making himself a sandwich, Paul gingerly breached the subject again. “So, how’s the geology report coming along?”
Scott was just putting the ham and mayo back in the fridge and his face brightened up. “Oh…I found something really cool! I think I can make this work after all. And wait until you see it!” He ravenously chowed down on his sandwich as he sauntered back over to his discarded backpack, then put the half-eaten sandwich on the coffee table. Unzipping one of the back flaps of his bag, he fished around inside with his hand. He brought out something that was wrapped in a paper towel and handed it to Paul.
Paul unwrapped it and his face registered astonishment. “What is this? It’s beautiful.”
“It’s a sphere, obviously. But this one is made of banded iron formation, a type of rock from my time period! It’ll be a great hands-on addition to my poster.”
Paul lifted the sphere up close to his eyes and gazed in wonder at the layered bands of dull grey and muted dark red that were a hallmark of this type of rock.
Scott got his notes out. “There was no oxygen in the Earth’s atmosphere at the time, and the only life was single cell organisms that lived in the ocean. As they produced oxygen from photosynthesis, it would react with the iron dissolved in the water, kind of like how rust happens in air.” He paused. “The oxygenated iron particles can’t dissolve in water so they precipitated down to the bottom. Vast fields of this iron accumulated in horizontal layers over long periods of time. The grey layers are the iron, and the red layers are other sediments that occurred in between blooms of these organisms, as would happen during summer and winter seasons. So that rock isn’t just pretty, it’s a signature of life.”
“Where did you find this?” Paul asked excitedly.
“The crystal shop, you know, the one owned by that eccentric older lady, Mrs. Smith?”
“I’ve driven by there before, but I don’t think I ever went in.”
“I asked her if she had anything from this time period and she just happened to have gotten this sphere in last week. It wasn’t even that expensive. She was telling me that she’s a Theosophist and that there’s so much we don’t know about history and how it affects the universe. She mentioned something I had to look up called the ‘Akashic records.’” Scott flipped his page over. “The basic idea is that all events are encoded in a non-physical plane of existence. A lot of bunk, I’m sure…but the rock sure is cool!”
Paul lowered the iron sphere and looked at Scott. “It’s true that a lot of the spiritual traditions on this planet don’t have a scientific basis, but most of them have some nugget of truth in them.”
Scott’s eyes grew wide. “Are you saying that these Akashic Records exist?” He picked up the sandwich again and bit a big chunk off.
“Probably not the way Mrs. Smith and her fellow beings believe, but yes—the experiences of an atom do leave imprints in spacetime that Earth science is not advanced enough to detect yet.”
Scott swallowed his bite of sandwich hard enough to make an audible “gulp.” He sat down across from Paul. “Whoa.”
Paul got his Algieban sphere out. “Here, I’ll show you.” He activated the silvery orb and its blue light filled the room. It grew bright enough that Scott had to squint and then finally shut his eyes. When he opened them again, it seemed as though he was no longer in their living room.
He was on the seashore, and the sun was setting over the ocean. He looked away from the horizon, at the barren outcrops of rock that rose from where he stood. “What is this?”
“An illusion, of course,” Paul said. “We couldn’t actually be here.”
“I hope not,” Scott said. “We wouldn’t live for more than a few minutes in this atmosphere. Hey, that’s a good line for my poster.” He looked up. “WHOA!”
“This is two billion years ago, remember,” Paul replied, after following Scott’s gaze. “The moon was much closer to the Earth at this time.”
“I can grasp that…intellectually. But seeing it like this…it’s stunning. I’ll have to draw this for my poster.” He looked down again at the sea. “Why is it green?”
“That green, Scott, is you, and Mrs. Smith, and everything else that will someday live on this world. Those are the organisms creating the rocks whose memory we are looking at now.”
“This is amazing,” Scott said after a big inhale of breath.
“Not so boring after all, eh?” Paul said. The sound of the sphere died away, and with it, the vision of the past, and they were once again in the normality of their living room.
“I wish I could have that in my geology project,” Scott lamented. “How long will it be before we can do that?”
“Hard to say,” Paul opined. “I’m sure you’ll start having virtual realities soon enough. The reading of the spacetime vibrations is still far beyond what humans are capable of…for now.”
“Look at how far we’ve come though, Dad. It’s incredible to think about.”
“Indeed, Scott, indeed. And humanity is just getting started. You should have some good material you can put into your project though.”
“Absolutely. I’m going to win with my presentation now. I’m actually excited about this supposedly boring piece of history.”
“Good,” Paul said. “I guess I’d better start dinner because I’m sure that sandwich was just an hors d’oeuvre. I’ll need to go to the grocery store—again.”
Scott shrugged. “Creativity makes me hungry, Dad.”
“I think everything makes you hungry, Scott. But stay creative, I have the feeling you’ll be a teacher someday. There’s a lot more out there to learn.”
On Sat, May 12, 2018 at 10:25 PM Chuck S chucksim@mindspring.com wrote: Let’s see, E=M(C squared). So 5000 pounds x the speed of light squared x the distance from Amazon IV to Earth....Yeah, that new sphere packs a heap of energy.
BTW, We all know Luna has a Mercedes nameplate, but that’s just to disguise it’s true identity from the FSA: http://www.forestriverinc.com/class-c-motorhomes/forester
On May 12, 2018, at 6:59 PM, Effie in the desert wadesert@hotmail.com wrote:
The needle never came close to "E".
(I wish I could better remember that line from the movie...)
From: UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Chuck S chucksim@mindspring.com Sent: Sunday, May 13, 2018 12:29 AM To: Under the Stars Subject: Re: [UTS] Sphere
And he did it on one tank of gas!
On May 12, 2018, at 6:25 PM, Todd Andrews taa@pobox.com wrote:
This past Tue when Bruce and Luna went off-world to Amazon IV in the Alpha Centauri star system. Free shipping because he picked it up himself.
I think.
On Sat, May 12, 2018 at 10:31 AM Effie in the desert wadesert@hotmail.com wrote: On which interplanetary journey you and Luna took did you acquire it?
From: UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Bruce Jividen kundar@gmail.com Sent: Saturday, May 12, 2018 1:50 AM To: Under the Stars Subject: [UTS] Sphere
My newest sphere is one Effie would appreciate—a banded iron formation piece. Probably around 2 billion years old, this type of rock was common before the atmosphere was oxygenated. It’s a lovely little piece of history.
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com _______________________________________________ UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
T-odd DM? Huh.
On Mon, May 14, 2018 at 7:33 PM Chuck S chucksim@mindspring.com wrote:
Good comprehensive graphic. There are more theories than I thought. This is a real life project I heard about when touring Fermi Labs near Chicago. They built the camera and mounted it on the telescope in Chile. Scott’s just following in the family map making business, while Paul’s grandson continues the StarFamily’s athletic prowess.
On May 14, 2018, at 6:20 PM, Bruce Jividen kundar@gmail.com wrote:
Given the current disarray around dark matter, I'd definitely say that anyone who solves that is getting a Nobel!
The favorite for a long time has been something called a Weakly Interactive Massive Particle (or WIMP), but since a number of WIMP detectors have found nothing so far, physicists are starting to think about alternatives. (And there are a lot!)
https://physics.aps.org/articles/v11/48
<e48_1.png>
On Mon, May 14, 2018 at 9:14 AM Chuck S chucksim@mindspring.com wrote:
Knew there was a story behind that rock! And what a fun story it was.
By the way, in Nina’s and my universe, Scott indeed becomes a professor and Astro-physicist at the University of Colorado in Boulder where he wins the Nobel Prize for his work on 3D mapping of the universe, proving the existence of dark matter. His son is on the US Olympic Swimming Team training in Colorado Springs.
On May 13, 2018, at 10:51 PM, Bruce Jividen kundar@gmail.com wrote:
All this talk about Amazon IV and lightspeed does make one wonder just what secrets might be hiding in this sphere of rock. Let's see what Starman says about it!
THE IRON SPHERE
By Bruce R. Jividen 5/13/2018
Paul was folding clothes when the door opened and Scott came in. Now in his senior year of high school, Scott was taller, lankier and hungrier than when Paul first met him four years ago. So not surprisingly, he tossed his backpack on the couch and headed straight for the fridge to find a snack.
“How’d school go?” Paul asked. Scott had recently been given an assignment to write about a period of the Earth’s history and create a visual display such as a diorama or poster. His teacher, Mr. Nelson, had randomly distributed different time periods amongst the class, and Scott had ended up with the Siderian period of the Paleoprotozoic, a unit of time two-point-three to two billion years ago.
At the time Scott had complained to Paul that while some of his classmates were getting to write about dinosaurs and wooly mammoths, Scott was stuck with a much less interesting time in history—in fact, some geologists had dismissed it as the “boring billion”—due to the lack of anything major happening in its duration.
“I’m sure you can find a way to make it interesting,” Paul had said cryptically, which Scott had dismissed in typical teenage fashion.
Now as Scott was making himself a sandwich, Paul gingerly breached the subject again. “So, how’s the geology report coming along?”
Scott was just putting the ham and mayo back in the fridge and his face brightened up. “Oh…I found something really cool! I think I can make this work after all. And wait until you see it!” He ravenously chowed down on his sandwich as he sauntered back over to his discarded backpack, then put the half-eaten sandwich on the coffee table. Unzipping one of the back flaps of his bag, he fished around inside with his hand. He brought out something that was wrapped in a paper towel and handed it to Paul.
Paul unwrapped it and his face registered astonishment. “What is this? It’s beautiful.”
“It’s a sphere, obviously. But this one is made of banded iron formation, a type of rock from my time period! It’ll be a great hands-on addition to my poster.”
Paul lifted the sphere up close to his eyes and gazed in wonder at the layered bands of dull grey and muted dark red that were a hallmark of this type of rock.
Scott got his notes out. “There was no oxygen in the Earth’s atmosphere at the time, and the only life was single cell organisms that lived in the ocean. As they produced oxygen from photosynthesis, it would react with the iron dissolved in the water, kind of like how rust happens in air.” He paused. “The oxygenated iron particles can’t dissolve in water so they precipitated down to the bottom. Vast fields of this iron accumulated in horizontal layers over long periods of time. The grey layers are the iron, and the red layers are other sediments that occurred in between blooms of these organisms, as would happen during summer and winter seasons. So that rock isn’t just pretty, it’s a signature of life.”
“Where did you find this?” Paul asked excitedly.
“The crystal shop, you know, the one owned by that eccentric older lady, Mrs. Smith?”
“I’ve driven by there before, but I don’t think I ever went in.”
“I asked her if she had anything from this time period and she just happened to have gotten this sphere in last week. It wasn’t even that expensive. She was telling me that she’s a Theosophist and that there’s so much we don’t know about history and how it affects the universe. She mentioned something I had to look up called the ‘Akashic records.’” Scott flipped his page over. “The basic idea is that all events are encoded in a non-physical plane of existence. A lot of bunk, I’m sure…but the rock sure is cool!”
Paul lowered the iron sphere and looked at Scott. “It’s true that a lot of the spiritual traditions on this planet don’t have a scientific basis, but most of them have some nugget of truth in them.”
Scott’s eyes grew wide. “Are you saying that these Akashic Records exist?” He picked up the sandwich again and bit a big chunk off.
“Probably not the way Mrs. Smith and her fellow beings believe, but yes—the experiences of an atom do leave imprints in spacetime that Earth science is not advanced enough to detect yet.”
Scott swallowed his bite of sandwich hard enough to make an audible “gulp.” He sat down across from Paul. “Whoa.”
Paul got his Algieban sphere out. “Here, I’ll show you.” He activated the silvery orb and its blue light filled the room. It grew bright enough that Scott had to squint and then finally shut his eyes. When he opened them again, it seemed as though he was no longer in their living room.
He was on the seashore, and the sun was setting over the ocean. He looked away from the horizon, at the barren outcrops of rock that rose from where he stood. “What is this?”
“An illusion, of course,” Paul said. “We couldn’t actually be here.”
“I hope not,” Scott said. “We wouldn’t live for more than a few minutes in this atmosphere. Hey, that’s a good line for my poster.” He looked up. “WHOA!”
“This is two billion years ago, remember,” Paul replied, after following Scott’s gaze. “The moon was much closer to the Earth at this time.”
“I can grasp that…intellectually. But seeing it like this…it’s stunning. I’ll have to draw this for my poster.” He looked down again at the sea. “Why is it green?”
“That green, Scott, is you, and Mrs. Smith, and everything else that will someday live on this world. Those are the organisms creating the rocks whose memory we are looking at now.”
“This is amazing,” Scott said after a big inhale of breath.
“Not so boring after all, eh?” Paul said. The sound of the sphere died away, and with it, the vision of the past, and they were once again in the normality of their living room.
“I wish I could have that in my geology project,” Scott lamented. “How long will it be before we can do that?”
“Hard to say,” Paul opined. “I’m sure you’ll start having virtual realities soon enough. The reading of the spacetime vibrations is still far beyond what humans are capable of…for now.”
“Look at how far we’ve come though, Dad. It’s incredible to think about.”
“Indeed, Scott, indeed. And humanity is just getting started. You should have some good material you can put into your project though.”
“Absolutely. I’m going to win with my presentation now. I’m actually excited about this supposedly boring piece of history.”
“Good,” Paul said. “I guess I’d better start dinner because I’m sure that sandwich was just an hors d’oeuvre. I’ll need to go to the grocery store— again.”
Scott shrugged. “Creativity makes me hungry, Dad.”
“I think everything makes you hungry, Scott. But stay creative, I have the feeling you’ll be a teacher someday. There’s a lot more out there to learn.”
On Sat, May 12, 2018 at 10:25 PM Chuck S chucksim@mindspring.com wrote:
Let’s see, E=M(C squared). So 5000 pounds x the speed of light squared x the distance from Amazon IV to Earth....Yeah, that new sphere packs a heap of energy.
BTW, We all know Luna has a Mercedes nameplate, but that’s just to disguise it’s true identity from the FSA: http://www.forestriverinc.com/class-c-motorhomes/forester
On May 12, 2018, at 6:59 PM, Effie in the desert wadesert@hotmail.com wrote:
The needle never came close to "E".
(I wish I could better remember that line from the movie...)
*From:* UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Chuck S < chucksim@mindspring.com> *Sent:* Sunday, May 13, 2018 12:29 AM *To:* Under the Stars *Subject:* Re: [UTS] Sphere
And he did it on one tank of gas!
On May 12, 2018, at 6:25 PM, Todd Andrews taa@pobox.com wrote:
This past Tue when Bruce and Luna went off-world to Amazon IV in the Alpha Centauri star system. Free shipping because he picked it up himself.
I think.
On Sat, May 12, 2018 at 10:31 AM Effie in the desert < wadesert@hotmail.com> wrote:
On which *interplanetary* journey you and Luna took did you acquire it?
*From:* UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Bruce Jividen < kundar@gmail.com> *Sent:* Saturday, May 12, 2018 1:50 AM *To:* Under the Stars *Subject:* [UTS] Sphere
My newest sphere is one Effie would appreciate—a banded iron formation piece. Probably around 2 billion years old, this type of rock was common before the atmosphere was oxygenated. It’s a lovely little piece of history.
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com
UTS mailing list UTS@starmanet.com http://starmanet.com/mailman/listinfo/uts_starmanet.com