Saturday, July 29, 2017

Impossible Fossilisations and Transmutations

Here's a series of interesting observations regarding the transmutation of matter:

According to this video, screws, sledgehammers and even electrical plugs have been found inside rocks that are allegedly millions of years old.

The narrator never doubts the scientists who make the claim that the rocks are as old as they claim. Scientists are apparently never wrong. Therefore, he concludes that 19th century screws and sledgehammers, as well as 20th century electric plugs were around millions of years ago.

This is of course nonsense. The artifacts are no older than they appear to be.

What has happened is that clay and mud have turned into rock through some kind of transmutation. Most probably with the help of a lightning strike.

This is what Peter Mungo Jupp thinks happened to most, if not all, plants and animals that we have found fossilized in rock. It happened almost instantaneously through a process of electric fossilization.

That would require one element to transmute into another element. Calcium in bones would have to become silicon. Such a process is nuclear, not chemical, and nuclear reactions are believed to only be possible inside advanced human made nuclear reactors. Could it really be the case that nuclear reactions of this kind could happen spontaneously in nature, fossilizing animals, trees, and human artifacts in the process?

As it happens, the process of transmutation may in fact be far more commonplace than we have thought. It may be going on inside biological organisms all the time. Organisms living in environments starved for certain base elements appear to be able to synthesize the elements they require through fission and fusion processes.

This is not bio-chemistry. It is bio-alchemy! Living organisms are able to do things that cannot be done in any chemistry lab on the planet, because this is not chemistry. It is nuclear physics.

So, how exactly are we to imagine biological organisms doing nuclear physics?

The answer lies most probably in electricity. What separates living organisms from mere blobs of organized matter is their electrical spark of life. This electricity can be used to zap atomic nuclei, either to split atoms through fission, or to join atoms through fusion.

All living organisms are advanced nuclear and chemical reactors. They do not stop at chemistry, they do nuclear physics too.

What fossilized ancient plants and animal is the same process that has fossilized modern artifacts, and it is similar to what is going on at a microscopic scale inside every living organism. Matter is constantly being transmuted through electrical processes at everything from gigantic cosmic scales down to the subatomic.

Staccoto Lightning.jpg
Lightning

By Griffinstorm - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, Link

2 comments:

  1. This helps me do my homework. How do organisms survive in a transmuting environment? I just want to know. Thank you.
    -A 9 year old kid

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    Replies
    1. The theory of biological transmutation suggests that organisms have the ability to transmute certain elements, and that they do this to their own advantage.

      Sudden transmutation of the environment by a lightning stroke will of course kill any organism caught up in it. This is the theory of instantaneous fossilization.

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