Friday, October 12, 2012

Huge Mysterious Eyeball Washes Up on Florida Shore - Escapist Magazine [fornadablog.blogspot.com]

Huge Mysterious Eyeball Washes Up on Florida Shore - Escapist Magazine [fornadablog.blogspot.com]

This video is about Nitinol memory metal engines that are basically Stirling heat engines and work on a very low temperature difference. This technology can be easily scaled up into the KWatts range and drive a power generator to generate 50 or 60 HZ AC power. If you use solar power via Fresnell lenses to heat the hot water bath you can convert this heat energy into mechanical motion energy and then use a generator to generate 120 Volts 60 Hz AC or 230 Volts 50 Hz AC power. Too bad the oil industry killed this invention also as it did also kill the electric cars ! In this report it is said, that 1 KWatts would require 600 US$ investment for the engine and that it is cheaper than PV and Nuclear power and this was in the 1970s. With todays alloy technology this price could be dropped dramatically and this would be a very cost effective technology. Also Nickel and Titan metals are not rare metals and it would be cheap to manufature without much maintainance... but Big Oil killed this technology long ago... What a shame... ! Original video was found here: www.youtube.com It was a major threat to the oil barons as is proved in this documentary. So where is all of this hidden technology now? Prize winning 1982 CNN report by science editor Kevin Sanders: www.warpeace.org His follow-up articles on Nitinol in Science Digest are here: www.colorsproject.com Update article on Nitinol Engines by Ridgeway Banks: www.winstonbrill.com Free Energy and Free Thinking www.feandft.com Regards ... Free Energy Nitinol Heat Machines invented in the early 1970.flv


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[fornadablog.blogspot.com], Huge Mysterious Eyeball Washes Up on Florida Shore - Escapist Magazine

Eye have no idea what this is.

Picture this: You are strolling along your favorite beach, taking in the serene morning sun with Scruffy, your new and rambunctious corgi puppy. It's Florida, so the autumnal weather hasn't quite put a damper on your early morning ritual. Both you and Scruffy are feeling frisky, so you let him of his leash to run in the waves and poke around in the seaweed. You laugh as Scruffy dashes into the cool green waves, yipping in delight, before sniffing at something in the sand. "What's that you got there, boy?" you might ask before - "Poseidon's Trident, WHAT IS THAT THING?"

At least, I imagine that's what happened when someone discovered a huge disembodied eyeball in Pompano Beach, 30 miles north of Miami, yesterday morning. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission had officials quickly go to pick up the specimen and posted pictures of the eyeball on its Facebook page, but even they are not certain exactly what kind of eye it is. The intrepid marine biologists dressed in red skull caps like Steve Zissou - again, this is what I pictured - placed the monstrous eye on ice and promised to perform DNA tests to identify what species it might be from.

Other marine biologists chimed in as to what creature could have such a large optic organ. "It probably is a squid eye - other things with eyes that big (fish, cetaceans) have them embedded in hard tissue. Squid eyes are in relatively soft tissue and more likely to dislodge as in the photo you sent. A quick DNA analysis could easily sort it our for you," said Robert L. Pitman, a marine biologist with the National Marine Fisheries Service in La Jolla, California.

Not so fast, Pitman. Apparently, there is more to this eye than meets the eye. "There appears to be bones around the eye, so that would rule out a squid. The primary suspect right now is that it would be a large fish," said Carli Segelson from the Florida commission and she was confident the experts would identify the species soon. "I shouldn't say this, but they may be able to eyeball it."

Har de har har, Carli. This is no laughing matter. I'm the only person authorized to make bad fisheye puns here.

Source: National Geographic

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