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Related Articles - The Hutchison Effect
Long before John
Hutchison began his pioneering experiments into electromagnetism
and alternative energy, travelers in the Bermuda Triangle had
reported odd occurrences involving electromagnetism: their ships
or planes would be seized by a strange vapor, then all equipment
would go haywire; unexplained fogs would sit over the ocean, yet
in all cases the weather was not right for creating fogs, and
there was certainly no reason for electromagnetic aberrations
such as they reported. But can electromagnetism cause a plane or ship to disappear? John has kept abreast of the unexplained in the world and is well aware of the effects reported in the Bermuda Triangle. In commenting on the applied ramifications, he has observed:
The Hutchison Effect's connection with the Triangle comes in many forms. Many of the effects he has created mimic those reported out there: strangely swirling clouds and lights, green glows and phosphorescence, and electromagnetic anomalies.
A team of Japanese scientists aim to be the first to drill through the planet's rocky crust and retrieve samples from the mantle, six miles below. The team hopes to learn more about what triggers undersea earthquakes, as well as to find out if bacterial life ever existed at such depths. It may take more than a year to break through the crust into Earth's mantle, and require a drill pipe 25 times the height of the Empire State building. Read more at The Guardian.
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The Hutchison Effect |
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