Rippee, Greg.
Text: "Mushroom cloud sighted off Japan." Mushroom-like cloud 150-miles in diameter explosively welled up above the ocean off Japan on April 9, 1984. Seventy-seven other such explosive "plumes" have been seen by U. S. weather satellites over the Soviet Arctic since 1974. Believed to be a "cold explosion," produced by artificial scalar interferometry. By utilizing negative potentials in beams intersecting at a distance, an endothermic reaction is initiated at the distant intersection point. The FAA transcript of the pilot's Mayday message reveals that this was a true explosion. The reporting pilot was an ex-B-52 pilot. He described the eruption of this mushroom cloud as precisely like that from a nuclear explosion, except there was no flash or great noise. A prime candidate for the location of at least one Tesla howitzer (scalar interferometer) being utilized for firing in the "cold explosion" mode is the Soviet Union's Bennett Island, Located in the East Siberian Sea about 350 miles north of the Soviet mainland near the Arctic Circle. On Bennett Island, NOAA-6 and NOAA-7 weather satellites have photographed what can only be the massive heat energy exhausts from such a weapon. Some of the exhaust plumes are 155 miles long, with multiple puffs in the exhaust trail. An area offshore is also noted for such exhausts. At least one vertical emergence of an explosive exhaust has been photographed. SEE-"Explosive events seen on Soviet Island." Aviation Week & Space Technology. Sept. 26, 1983. p.31. [Satellite photographs are included in the article]. Los Angeles Daily News. Apr. 11, 1984. p. 1, 8.
See Also: Cold explosion, scalar electromagnetics, anomalous phenomena, artificial scalar interferometry, Soviet weapons, Bennett Island, cold explosion exhausts.
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