View Full Version : Perusing The Ocean Floor
I came across a very large book published in 1980 by National Geographic; they had undertaken to map the ocean floor.
There is not a lot of information about the ocean floors and even less in the public domain. There are some very unusual markings and shapes to investigate.
Here are two images from that book.
Larger Images:
oceanfloor.JPG (http://earthsbanner.com/Images/oceanfloor.JPG)
indianocean.JPG (http://earthsbanner.com/Images/indianocean.JPG)
Swami Salami
12-11-2008, 09:58 AM
This might be interesting.........
Please explain to me how a planet can gain mass from the inside out?
unipax
12-11-2008, 01:49 PM
seabeds. fascinating.
they make up what, about 2/3 of the earth's surface ?
thats a big unknown
with the various ancient ruins and legends, you gotta figure it has all been studied as much as possible with the big subs and maybe other classified gear.
do you see something in particular in your: "very unusual makings and shapes to investigate."...?
Bobbi
12-11-2008, 02:54 PM
When I first saw these pictures, my immediate response was "Oh my goodness, it's all been graphed out!" The exact grid marks are easily identifiable in these photos. Remember, this is what the bottom of the sea floor looks like EXACTLY. Now don't you find that incredibly odd? Do you think this kind of patterning is even remotely the result of a naturally occuring event?
unipax
12-11-2008, 03:06 PM
Oh I see the grid marks.
Actually I had seen seabed images just like these elsewhere, and I thought those marks were part of the undersea mountain ranges.
Those images must be artist's renditions of the data gathered by sonar or whatever tech is used, so can we be sure of what the artist intended?
Norval
12-11-2008, 03:34 PM
No Unipax, these are deep scan sonar images, not art work. They are presented in this format in the book so we can see the size, in comparison to the rest of the land, of the sea floor markings.
Speaking of art, ever do clay modeling? A fork is used extensively for base shaping work, then smoothed. Our sea floors look like some huge fork was used to shape things down there, or not. One thing for sure is there is far too much symmetry and systematic marking showing up to be "natural", IMHO. Can anyone say "terra forming"?
unipax
12-11-2008, 03:39 PM
oh. thnx
any idea of the purpose of that particular terra forming ?
..........................................
Norval
12-11-2008, 03:43 PM
Many possibilities, a few probabilities, and some day we will learn the one that is truth. How's your patience? :rofl:
unipax
12-11-2008, 03:55 PM
Oh, I have lotsa patience. Sometimes maybe I have too much but thats a different subject.
Anyway the terra forming appears, or so I thought, to follow what looks like the spines of mountain ranges, which is why I thought it was just mountain terrain.
Now I wonder if it is terra forming associated with mountain terrain or just terra forming alone
When I first saw these pictures, my immediate response was "Oh my goodness, it's all been graphed out!" The exact grid marks are easily identifiable in these photos. Remember, this is what the bottom of the sea floor looks like EXACTLY. Now don't you find that incredibly odd? Do you think this kind of patterning is even remotely the result of a naturally occuring event?
My first response when I was looking through this book, well I had it on my coffee table and I was sitting on the floor flipping the pages, staring at the pages... I went and pour myself a stiff drink.
The only other images of the ocean floor I had seen up until that time was the USGS map of earthquakes, but these markings were much more prominent than any on the USGS maps.
These markings or structural shaping like this on all the ocean floors and on closer scrutiny the landmasses have some traces of similar markings, this is way outside the bell curve of probability.
zorgon
12-12-2008, 08:38 PM
They are presented in this format in the book so we can see the size, in comparison to the rest of the land, of the sea floor markings.
Book Schmook... You guys DO realize you live in a world with technological wonders that bring the world to your finger tips at the press of a mere button
Go on... go ahead push the red button
You know you want to
oh man, thanks zorgon
:bananen_smilies091:
but it doesn't have the poles in a top down view like in the schmook
zorgon
12-12-2008, 08:48 PM
How's your patience? :rofl:
My patience SUCKS Getting to old... no time to waste
Norval
12-12-2008, 08:48 PM
Thanks Zorgon, , pretty cool. Gawd I love the web, ,
Zenbuoy
12-12-2008, 08:49 PM
Book Schmook...
You know you want to
God, what a great laugh I just had. Worth the price of admission. Thank you.
Norval
12-12-2008, 08:52 PM
What really begs asking, is how long has this true bottom imaging been available to the PTB, and how long to the public? :lol:
zorgon
12-12-2008, 09:00 PM
Mediterranean Seafloor Map 1982
http://www.maps.com/map.aspx?pid=16013
zorgon
12-12-2008, 09:02 PM
Thanks Zorgon, , pretty cool. Gawd I love the web, ,
That'll be a buck and a quarter...
Need coffee
unipax
12-12-2008, 09:09 PM
thanks Zorgon
this is amazing.
anybody gots opinions re why the patterning is bold where it meets itself at what looks like the 'ridgeline' of a mountain range ?
It is bold at the 'ridgeline' then it becomes fainter towards the 'foothills' on either side of the ridgeline.
are we looking at sculpted elevation / hills ?
unipax
12-12-2008, 09:13 PM
editing
...........................................
Norval
12-12-2008, 09:14 PM
Well Zorgon, if yer ever up in the PNW area here, how about a fresh seafood dinner? Our treat.
unipax
12-12-2008, 09:20 PM
Big difference in Mediterranean.
I dont see any straight line grid there. It all looks like more natural peaks.
On the world map, it looks like some grids strung between Cairo and Athens, but same area on the Med Map looks more natural ie random peaks and trenches .
The magnification feature is cool
Norval
12-12-2008, 09:27 PM
It reminds me of curf cutting a piece of wood to allow for bending, or possibly like expansion relief cuts in rubber products.
unipax
12-12-2008, 09:37 PM
It reminds me of curf cutting a piece of wood to allow for bending, or possibly like expansion relief cuts in rubber products.
yes it do
do you think we are looking at differences in elevation?
unipax
12-12-2008, 09:41 PM
two ideas
one: it was formed for varying elevations for agricultural climate variety
another: we are looking at past mining operations
Heretic
12-13-2008, 10:11 AM
lots of unnatural geometry, squares, rectangles, and half circles all over the place
pangea has always made me wonder on the cosmic collision hypothesis
Norval
12-15-2008, 06:51 AM
This don't look like anything a collision would make. IMHO
two ideas
one: it was formed for varying elevations for agricultural climate variety
another: we are looking at past mining operations
Or three,
We are looking at markings from the original making of Earth preserved underwater.
From the level of technology to make crater chains and do the destruction that we see in our Sol system then it isn’t a far stretch of ones imagination to the making of planets and moons.
unipax
12-22-2008, 11:01 AM
not at all
was it Hoagland that reported on a NASA mission that essentially banged on the moon, and the results indicated it is more hollow than solid ?
The moon rings like a bell.
₣яэđĸĊ
01-02-2009, 05:19 PM
Thanks Zorgon, , pretty cool. Gawd I love the web, ,
Way back... and I mean waaaaay back, when CD drives were new, I went to buy one and the guy at Comp-USA asked me what I wanted it for.
I told him, "So I can get ahold of, and read the vast amount of documents avail out there in text form."
He stared at me like I'd just fallen out of the ceiling from another planet. He was obviously thinking games, more games, some games, etc. That look was part of the reason I started saving off, and putting docs on my own machine in a manner where I could search and browse them on it's own web server.
For another odd look at the ocean bottom, try the stuff on the yonaguni site:
Geologists are still trying to tell folk this is just a natural formation. Right! They'll prolly say that about the forum in Rome someday too, if this rock lasts that long. Lots of other photos avail on the Net (yay net).
http://www.morien-institute.org/yonaguni.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yonaguni
₣яэđĸĊ
01-02-2009, 05:22 PM
The moon rings like a bell.
and according to the short book Ingo Swann wrote, after Apollo 12 dropped the take-off pkg, it did so for almost an hour.
Link to book in PDF form:
http://fredsitelive.com/personal/I_Swan_Book.pdf
Norval
01-04-2009, 11:41 AM
Investigating the ocean's floors was only possible after deep sonar capabilities were made available. Coupled with today's modern computer technologies we have a very good map of the actual floors of the world's oceans.
What it shows is very intriguing to say the least. Why it seems to be so systematically lined in its contours is highly questionable I would have to say. What could have caused such lineal patterning seems to be the big question on all of our minds.
This patterning brings forth the question; How could this be natural? At least to me it does.
India just discovered a bunch of underwater structures since the earthquake and tsunami.
The Document says Earth was created, therefore it is a construct; a construct would show evidence of it being a construct. Could those markings be evidence of the original building material scoring to fit on a curve? Or are you suggesting all those linear markings are structures?
zorgon
01-09-2009, 12:05 AM
IF you were a proponent of the expanding Earth hypothesis... perhaps these are 'stretch marks'
Norval
01-09-2009, 08:24 AM
That is a good thought also Zorgon, it could be to allow expansion, or even movement of some kind. :)
Swami Salami
01-09-2009, 10:54 AM
Basalt forming on the oceanfloor due to earth expanding???
Like scoring pavement or concrete to allow for expansion with increase in temperature.
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