Metal buried in the ground and left for more than 24 hours creates a capacitor effect and accumulates energy around it in a radius of 12 to 50 meters. This field is homogeneous and nothing is caught in it, neither with a locator that supposedly excites the metal nor with a simple baguette. The only thing that is caught is the normal radiation when any baguette with a witness of the metal being searched for is passed over the buried metal.
It is impossible to remotely detect metal buried in the ground. Its information field is located kilometers away. Fields of buried metals and the exact location of already extracted metals can be detected remotely. Unfortunately, this is the truth, because nuclear magnetic resonance exists only in laboratory conditions. In nature, we only have information resonance, which is a prerequisite for detecting only information fields.
While not dowsing the frequency generators work similar to a pulse induction metal detector and a Proton Precession Magnetometer. The magnetic field surrounding the target acts like a loudspeaker. It only takes a tiny amount of power to excite the target’s field when the correct precession frequency or a harmonic of it is used. A lot of people make the mistake of using too much power. Other problems include conductive ground as the signal leaks out in all directions.
The field that is created around all metals in the earth is electric or electrostatic. Metal buried in the earth becomes a capacitor that is charged by the electrostatic electricity emitted from the earth's core. A magnetic field can only exist around ferrous metals.
Something quite strange in the “Supersensonics” book Hills talked about a different kind of electricity he called it proticity because it worked with protons instead of electrons.
If you are familiar with the PPM a magnetic pulse causes many/most of the protons to align and then when the pulse is shut off the protons swing back like a compass needle creating a field. Each element on the periodic table has its own unique precession frequency. Yes, it depends on the surrounding magnetic field strength, thus the name Earth Field NMR.
Mike has many frequencies that resonate with, for example, gold and silver, but they do not resonate with the atomic nucleus of the metal as is said. Turen discovered that in addition to a magnetic and electrical component, a wave also has an information component. We people with a baguette in our hand in nature resonate with the information field of the metal we are looking for. The big problem is that after the metal is buried in the ground and remains buried for years, its information field does not leave the metal itself, but the ether carries it kilometers away from the buried metal, and therefore nothing is registered with the baguette in the area where it is buried.
Well I’m not going to waste my time trying to convince you of something you have your mind set against, but for other people I will say a quote from a top h ch inc hunter: “If there’s one thing that probably cost me more gold than all equipment bear downs, or other problems put together—it’s negativity…”
In no way do I have a negative attitude towards radiesthesia and metal searching with baguettes. You misunderstood me. I simply had the chance to discover something unthinkable and incomprehensible, as I see for you. Searching with a baguette, regardless of what kind, in the field in nature, is doomed to 99 percent failure. The only way to achieve success is to work on a satellite image and only then in the field in nature.
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