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Re: bylosellhy post# 35929

Friday, 11/05/2010 11:23:58 AM

Friday, November 05, 2010 11:23:58 AM

Post# of 173212
Yeah, but...



For over 20 years we've been routinely using magnetic field disturbances to image matter of varying composition through layers that are opaque to human vision. We do this so accurately that they can drill a hole in your skull and freeze a few cells deep in your brain with accuracy to .005 on three axes.

This is done with very powerful magnetic fields and known constants of electromagnetism and capacitance in elements and compounds. It allows us to see and image things as similar as organs side by side in the body. Imagine how much easier it would be to differentiate between low atomic weight elements like the background silicon and carbon vs. the gold and copper.

ZTEM uses the earth's own magnetic field, millions of times more powerful, and can read the data in reverse polarity and cross-wave, allowing the same deposit to be "seen" from three different angles. This allows for some of the 3D detailed animations we see. This is not some on-site generator and coil rig that detects surface deposits via a field generated locally. Those components are just for reading the existing magnetic field generated by thousands of simultaneous thunderstorms around the globe, connecting poles on a giant nickel-iron sphere.

And in ten years it will be routine and they'll find more of these, but for now we're the Big Kahuna. I'm more concerned with getting a good deal in a timely fashion than finding dry holes.
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