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Greater Things
> News > Polar
Melting and Nuclear Bombs Connected According to New Scientific Theory |
Polar Melting and Nuclear Bombs Connected
According to New Scientific Theory
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| "Detonating many nuclear explosions at
once, such as in a nuclear war scenario, would be like focusing a giant blow torch toward
the center of the earth" |
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-- David W. Allan, physicist |
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Sterling D. Allan
March 27, 2000
© 2000 Greater Things
Many people have been given visions of the future destiny of this country, being shown what
could happen if we continue in the direction we are currently headed.
One of the common themes that comes up is nuclear attack from Russia and China along with their
satellite ally countries. Another common theme is a description of a massive rise of the ocean's
waters due to polar ice cap melting.
| According to a new unified field theory in process of being published by David W. Allan,
atomic clock physicists, formerly of Boulder Colorado, these two phenomenon have a
cause-effect relationship.
"The nuclear column in an atomic blast is a classical example of the theory,"
notes Allan." In other explosions, the blast emanates in all directions, but in a
nuclear explosion, the highly charged particles follow up the earth's diallel gravitational
lines. This is the reason for the columnar stem of the mushroom cloud."
"Not only do the highly charged particles go up the stem of the mushroom cloud, but
the same diallel gravitational field lines focus a massive amount of the emitted energy to
the center of the earth -- triggering additional core heating due to their convergence at
the center of the earth's gravitational mass," Allan explains. |

David W. Allan

high-energy
particles go up
and down
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"Detonating many nuclear explosions at once, such as in a nuclear war scenario, would be
like focusing a giant blow torch toward the center of the earth," says Allan. Hence, many
nuclear explosions could contribute to polar ice cap melting and the rise of the ocean levels and
the inundation of the continents with water. Other heating factors could stem from the
green-house effect.
You may visit David Allan's website at http://www.allanstime.com,
though the papers he has written on the theory are not yet accessible to the public, as they are
awaiting peer review publication in scientific journals.
-- end --
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