Harold Edgerton carrying out the side scan sonar survey.

Harold Edgerton carrying out the side scan sonar survey.

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Journal of Scientific Exploration, Volume 35, Issue 3, Fall 2021

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... is considered the father of this kind of survey. He worked using an EG&G Model 259 side scan sonar, and Mark 1B System Tow-Fish, both specially modified to Edgerton's specifications by EG&G 8 (see Figure 2). ...
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... Viewing data from R3 while at his Canadian home during the first Map Probe. Site associated with the ancient seawall, which R3 felt extended in antiquity considerably farther out into the sea than is presently the case (see Figure 13 and Figure 28). ...
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... Site. Respondent R11 selected Site 5 along Fort Silsila's western flank, and provided a general description of important buildings (see Figure 13 and Figure 26). ...
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... were unfamiliar with diving, had no sense of divers being in the water, and did not appear to recognize the divers' flag. During the short dives, however, we saw what seemed to be remnants of some construction, and we brought up some broken amphorae (see Figure 25), a kind of clay vessel usually a few feet long, used in antiquity to carry cargo like oil or grain. ...
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... produced both a detailed drawing of the lighthouse, and the observation that the building was constructed of "red granite". 17 Of particular interest was his description of "round stone things" (Figure 20), 18 which could not be directly correlated with any objects described in ancient sources, nor anything seen on the single dive. This is a good example of a Remote Viewing observation with a low a priori probability. ...
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... to the crown we located several clusters of the unusual stone "beads" predicted and described by R3 before the first phase of diving had begun. They apparently were exposed when the seafloor dropped, since we had not seen either them or the crown on earlier dives (see Figure 20). The beads were uniformly about 2.6 meters in circumference and, just as in R3's drawing, had holes approximately 20 centimeters across and between 15 and 20 centimeters in depth. ...
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... Exactly where she meant the Royal Harbor to be was not clear. A palace was also described by R9 as having been in this area and both she and R3 drew pictures which have many similarities (see Figure 21 and Figure 22). Since we had already dived in this area when it was first selected back in the spring of 1979, it was with particular interest that we returned for a second examination. ...
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... Respondents chose this area. Two felt that the site was the location of a sunken boat (see Figure 23 for R5's drawing and comments; Arrian, 1942, p. 467). They each drew virtually the same drawing in describing the boat (see Figure 24 for R3's drawing). ...
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... felt that the site was the location of a sunken boat (see Figure 23 for R5's drawing and comments; Arrian, 1942, p. 467). They each drew virtually the same drawing in describing the boat (see Figure 24 for R3's drawing). 33 R3 felt there should also be a statue(s). ...
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... could find neither the boat nor the statues remote viewing had predicted and Saadat in his earlier dives had confirmed. However, there were odd suggestive raised areas beneath the silt, and we found several mostly intact amphorae, commonly used as cargo containers on the cargo boats that trafficked in and out of the harbor in antiquity (see Figure 25). Remote Viewing, and described as being associated with a shipwreck. ...
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... In the Fall of 1995, a French-Egyptian archaeological team involving some of the Egyptian archaeologists who had worked with Mobius in 1979Mobius in -1980, and who knew all of our findings, announced the results of a much longer survey they had conducted. Every site located and described by the remote viewers was confirmed, as this map makes clear ( Figure 26). ...
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... Viewing transcript, Respondent R3, May 12, 1979, and drawing ( Figure 20). ...
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... aim of an RV session is to report information about the target stimulus in a way that is as unfiltered as possible (i.e., preferably without analytical overlays). The qualitative data in the form of descriptions and sketches (for example, see Figure 2) that result from an RV session can be quantified with the help of a rating method for the statistical analysis. All participants had previous experience with the CRV protocol and used it consistently during the study. ...
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... only object in the solar system that generates a large radiation field is the interior of the Sun. We can then imagine that the wormhole funnels the radiation field of an interior zone of the Sun from one of its extremities up to the other extremity placed in the earth's atmosphere (and very possibly also along magnetic field lines) (Figure 2). This suggestion is thus closely based on the model of Dzhunushaliev et al. (2011) where two twin stars are linked together, but with the difference that we suppose that the wormhole is traversable only by radiation and magnetic fields and definitely not through solar matter. ...
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... appropriate a magnetic field line ultimately forms a closed path by passing by the wormhole channel and by looping through the real space between the Earth and the Sun (Figure 2). Journal of Scientific Exploration, Vol. ...
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... Some even argued that some ideas in physics supported religious ideas, as did Balfour Stewart and Peter Guthrie Tait (Figure 2) in their controversial and widely read book The Unseen Universe or Physical Speculations on a Future State (1875), a work discussed later by Noakes. Stewart and Tait argued for the existence of a universe that could not be perceived by our senses but was connected with the known universe, and for the lack of incompatibility between religion and science. ...

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