Genetic Engineering Of Stone: Frame Construction Of The Landscape And The Liesegang Rings - Alternative View

Genetic Engineering Of Stone: Frame Construction Of The Landscape And The Liesegang Rings - Alternative View
Genetic Engineering Of Stone: Frame Construction Of The Landscape And The Liesegang Rings - Alternative View

Video: Genetic Engineering Of Stone: Frame Construction Of The Landscape And The Liesegang Rings - Alternative View

Video: Genetic Engineering Of Stone: Frame Construction Of The Landscape And The Liesegang Rings - Alternative View
Video: Reciprocal frame study 2024, May
Anonim

The first part is here: Genetic engineering of stone: frame construction of mountains or how the stone dough ripens.

Stone genetic engineering laboratories are found all over the planet and each uses a different approach and principles. There are even ancient settlements based on these natural energy structures. The artifacts presented below are attributed by scientists to the so-called. Liesegang rings, but the natural growth process is supplemented here with a man-made one (crystal lattice + nodules). Usually a person makes bricks first and then glue them with cement. Ancient landscape designers had a slightly different technology:

On the basis of the crystal lattice, a framework was first made (you can compare it with a skeleton) with cells, the cells were filled with stone "dough", it grew, forming whole boulders, mountains and canyons. Voila.

Self-organization processes play a huge role in nanosystems. They allow controlled obtaining of molecular structures with a given spatial configuration and properties. One example of self-organization in chemical systems is periodic structures made of concentric circles.

What are the Liesegang rings?

Liesegang RINGS - 1) layered structures formed during the deposition of insoluble sediments in gels; 2) concentric rings or rhythmically intermittent stripes observed in jasper, agate, etc.; 3) alternating layers of jelly containing sediment and free from sediment, resulting from the counter diffusion of two solutes, which, when interacting, form an insoluble compound (Note: also known as "Liesegang layers").

These structures were first obtained in 1896 by the German chemist R. Liesegang, who, while experimenting with photochemicals, discovered that if you drop lapis {a pharmaceutical alloy of salts - potassium nitrate and silver nitrate used for disinfection, "cauterizing" wounds} onto a glass plate, coated with gelatin and containing a chromate ion, the reaction product, precipitating, is located on the plate in concentric circles. Liesegang was carried away by this phenomenon and has been researching it for almost half a century.

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Promotional video:

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The open phenomenon found practical application in the study of various processes in physics and chemistry, in applied arts, Liesegang's rings were used to decorate various products with imitation of jasper, malachite, agate, etc. Liesegang also proposed a technology for making artificial pearls.

A possible physical mechanism explaining the formation of Liesegang structures was first proposed by Ostwald in 1987. It is based on the assumption of periodic occurrence of supersaturation in space and time and its effect on the rate of solid phase nucleation. Ostwald later proposed a mechanism for "sharpening" the sediment ("Ostwald ripening") - the dissolution of small and growth of large particles. These two mechanisms currently underlie alternative approaches to the theoretical explanation of sedimentary structures.

As in the previous post, first the frame is made, then the dough grows in it. The only difference is that here it usually grows in concentric circles. We look for ourselves, we trust our eyes, not bookish dogmas.

This is how individual specimens of the breed look.

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Very similar to tree rings isn't it?

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And here is what happens when you combine the principle of nodule growth with a frame (crystal) lattice:

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Liesegang Rings, Widemouth, Cornwall England.

Other examples:

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Bouddi National Park Australia:

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Pay attention to the sprouts of stone skin that we have already seen in Taiwan:

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Let me remind you that in this and similar places there is such an egg-laying:

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Flint & Steel beach, Hawkesbury River Australia.

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Abalone Cove USA:

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Arkansas:

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Liesegang rings in the Garden of the Gods in Shawnee National Forest by Illinois:

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Remains of used tools? (Arkansas).

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This is also considered to be Liesegang rings.

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Our ancestors built their settlements and portals on the same natural principles:

The floor of St. Isaac's Cathedral and the stone portal in Solovki:

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Goseck Circle, Germany and Arkaim:

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Chysauster Ancient Village in Cornwal:

After 1000 years, geologists will simply call this masonry the remains of a mountain:

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The village today.

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A whole embankment was built here:

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On the left in the center, you can see a naughty stone sprout, a series of which we previously saw here.

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Like all living things, stones can have different races and types, structures, growth rates, sizes, softness, hardness, malleability in management (compliance or refusal to cooperate) and the inception of growth programs, porosity and methods of appearance in (visible to us) light … Considering that any stone consists of crystals, and crystals have the ability to accumulate energy information and tend to grow, the possibility of growth of the stone itself in different forms and principles (including fractally similar to biological ones) is more than obvious. Thus, it is possible not only to cultivate and teach these mineral life forms in landscape design, but also to negotiate with them about the production of building materials, new types of ores and other utilities, which our ancestors did.

Session excerpt:

Q: How does a stone materialize?

A: Materialized from seeds by compaction. An analogy is drawn with a mycelium, the smallest particle falls into the ground, begins to grow, condenses quanta around itself (it takes them from the bank of quanta). The seeds of rocks and metals were sown by different creations, civilizations, this is a creative process, genetic engineering of matter.

One of the most ancient signs of the One / Architect / Creator is a point in a circle, personifying an observer surrounded by infinity, and a person (and all living things in the world), as we remember, is His fractal, an embodied aspect of the Creator, a multidimensional Soul that has the ability to expand its field to reasonable limits.

Where there is no point, no line, plane or solid can arise. This is the foundation on which the three physical dimensions actually rest. Hence, it is obvious that the reason why Masons from time immemorial recognized the Point as a symbol of God - the Great Architect of the Universe.

Thus, Liesegang rings are the personification of the symbol of the One in nature

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