Post by mfromcanada on Aug 6, 2007 18:55:56 GMT -5
I got this from the old fiber disease board and it was written by "befour" who I am certain was on to something.
"A4.3.4 Artificial scales/feathers
The possible requirement for a morphable surface which is capable of large area change
as well as repeated movement with no degradation, led to the idea of a flexible, growing,
aerodynamic surface. Bird feathers create a highly flexible aerodynamic surface, which
does not depend heavily on any single feather. Similarly fish scales cover a highly
flexible surface that is optimized for a fluid flow environment. The scales on reptiles
similarly allow great flexibility.
A4.3.3 Continuously growing sensors
The conflicting requirements of a growing skin layer and intimate surface sensing led to
the idea of sensors that grow with the skin. This problem is faced by most (all?)
biological systems. The solution is small sensor structures that penetrate the skin surface.
Skin hairs are, among other functions, highly sensitive sensors that grow and are replaced
while the skin around them also grows and is replaced. "
I searched and found the link
www.csc.liv.ac.uk/~suc/structural/NASAReport%20211773.pdf
I now realize it is not fern frond shapes that I am coughing up but feather shapes. These must be coming from the chemtrails which feather out.
Also, the shapes under my skin which I described as like a rake are also likely feather shapes. These fibers feather out under our skin.
Also, it talks about evergrowing sensors which would be inside the hair in the skin. Sounds like a hair within a hair.
I thing skytroll etc were on to something back then and I want to bring this forward again.
"A4.3.4 Artificial scales/feathers
The possible requirement for a morphable surface which is capable of large area change
as well as repeated movement with no degradation, led to the idea of a flexible, growing,
aerodynamic surface. Bird feathers create a highly flexible aerodynamic surface, which
does not depend heavily on any single feather. Similarly fish scales cover a highly
flexible surface that is optimized for a fluid flow environment. The scales on reptiles
similarly allow great flexibility.
A4.3.3 Continuously growing sensors
The conflicting requirements of a growing skin layer and intimate surface sensing led to
the idea of sensors that grow with the skin. This problem is faced by most (all?)
biological systems. The solution is small sensor structures that penetrate the skin surface.
Skin hairs are, among other functions, highly sensitive sensors that grow and are replaced
while the skin around them also grows and is replaced. "
I searched and found the link
www.csc.liv.ac.uk/~suc/structural/NASAReport%20211773.pdf
I now realize it is not fern frond shapes that I am coughing up but feather shapes. These must be coming from the chemtrails which feather out.
Also, the shapes under my skin which I described as like a rake are also likely feather shapes. These fibers feather out under our skin.
Also, it talks about evergrowing sensors which would be inside the hair in the skin. Sounds like a hair within a hair.
I thing skytroll etc were on to something back then and I want to bring this forward again.