Topic: Our Nuclear Planet
Here is an interesting site (if you can grasp it).
http://nuclearplanet.com/
Could this explain the fluctuations in our magnetic field?
Could this explain the rising temperatures?
An interesting theory that deserves scrutiney.
With the solar flares starting to ramp up, the rising temperatures in the oceans (slowing the flow), and the increase in storms, could there be more to this theory than meets the eye? And if so, what will that mean to our future?
snippet:
Herndon suggested that the inner core of the Earth consists, not of partially crystallized iron metal, but of nickel silicide. He has shown by fundamental mass ratios that i) the Earth as a whole, especially the inner 82%, has a state of oxidation like primitive enstatite chondrites, and ii) the lower mantle and core are similar in composition to the Abee enstatite chondrite. By analogy with Abee data, CaS and MgS precipitates from the core are expected to collect at the core-mantle boundary and, significantly, a major fraction of the actinides are expected to precipitate from the core and to collect at the center of the Earth.
and then this:
Russian Scientists are reporting today that a 5.5 Magnitude Event Earthquake that occurred in the Northwestern Balkan Peninsula was caused by a strange, and previously unheard of, Cosmic Blast discharged from our Earths atmosphere towards an as of yet undetermined ‘object’ in space. This new phenomena had as its ‘trigger’ a similar Cosmic Blast from our sun that interacted with the Earths Electromagnetic Field from a Coronal Mass Ejection at 0300 UT this date.
Russian Scientists state that this unique event is sure to re-energize the International debate as to what is exactly at the core of our Earth, and as we can read as reported by the United Press International News Service in their article titled "Evidence boosts core nuke theory" and which says, "New government laboratory test results are fueling a controversial contention that a giant natural nuclear reactor at the center of the Earth powers the planet's life-protecting magnetic field -- but it might be running out of gas, scientists told United Press International.