Dr. Marvin Herndon is back in the news. A few years ago some of his research related to his theory on the possibility of a natural uranium breeder reactor in the earth's core raised a few eyebrows. Dr. Herndon had collaborated with scientists at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (using a super computer) to test some modeling on the concept. The results were intriguing. Dr. Herndon was a student of Dr. Marvin Rowe, Professor Emeritus of Texas A and M University. Dr. Rowe received his Ph.D. by working under Professor Paul K. Kuroda of the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, where I earned my Ph.D. under Kuroda a couple of decades later. Kuroda published a theory of the natural nuclear reactor in a geological setting (1.9 billion years ago) in 1956. In a uranium mine in the Belgian Congo in 1972, French scientists discovered the remnants of a natural nuclear reactor which occurred precisely 1.9 billion years ago, and produced a low-power chain reaction for about 100,000 years. The site was later used to study the migration of nuclear waste (most radionuclides did not move much).
His newest publication involves the so called "chemtrails" in the skies around the world that have been a controversial point of discussion on various blogs and forums over the last few years. His findings indicate that fly ash from coal burning power plants is being released in the atmosphere as part of a clandestine geoengineering activity that has been going on for at least 15 years. Read more about this here.
No comments:
Post a Comment