Last modified on 02/06/2011, 09:39 PM

In a first chapter devoted to the site of Avebury,see La centrale d'Avebury we just saw how this megalithic machine worked: as a power plant capturing and converting energy from lightning.
In a lightning power plant,See La centrale d'Avebury the effectiveness of antennas (or sensors) allowed the Atlanteans not to depend on the storms, but to attract them. Note that if lightningRead La foudre, cette inconnue is produced by clouds, it can fall by any weather. In natural conditions, we saw lightning flashes fall 9 miles ahead of the clouds. The sensor of Avebury's power plant is Silbury Hill,Click > the pyramidal hill. Recent excavations have shown that this conical pyramid consists in compartments of granitic stone filled with limestone.
Silbury Hill is a large electric battery, a gigantic prehistoric battery. What is more efficient to attract lightning?
A priori, this giant battery was not made for storing energy, but to preserve a certain electric potential that acted upon the cloudsSee La foudre, cette inconnue like an electromagnet terminal. Thus, the beneficial lightning could fall endless on Silbury Hill, which distributed its benefits to the surrounding land. During a first trip, still ignoring the function of the lightning antennaRead la porte de la foudre of Silbury, we foolishly climbed the hill, secretly hoping to discover any crop circleRead Crop-circles du Wiltshire from above. We might as well spared the sweat. And the hill vibrated very low on the Bovis scale.To discover the Bovis scale and other notions of geobiology, go to Pieds nus sur la terre sacrée

To reach it, we had to cross barbed wire close together, where one of us has torn a palm. The warning was clear, but we stupidly passed on. Climbing was more painful than the slope let suppose: on several occasions, one or the other nearly fell down. Finally arrived on the circular platform of the summit, instead of enjoying the view, we had only one thought, to quickly climd down, to leave this unhealthy place. Afterwards, we understood why.

Whoever has the imprudence to stand at the top of Silbury Hill takes without knowing the place of the pyramidalRead Le mystère de la grande pyramide which was there before. He reactivates therefore the lightning sensor, even if it means becoming quickly a grilled chipolata. Not quite, for the antenna-battery no longer works.Click + But its unhealthy vibration is still quite noticeable. So here is the first element of a lightning power plant, the sensorSee La porte de la foudre that attracts lightning flashes. And we discovered it by feeling the powerful and terrible effects in our body.Comparables, en plus puissants, aux effets de l'énergie cosmo-tellurique sur les sensitifs. Voir L'oeil du labyrinthe From there, the rest of the process was clarifies in our minds.

Then, secondly, the lightning captured by the pyramidal hill must be broken up into fire balls.Read L'éclair en boule It is the role of Avebury Henge.Read La centrale fulgurale d'Avebury The Henge is a triple enclosure: inside is a wide circle of menhirs or standing stones. Around it, a circular ditch which was formerly filled with water, like a moat. Around the ditch, an earthen levee, a sort of circular dike which probably contains a bed of pebblesFor subtle conductivity. Read L'oeil du labyrinthe in its base, as the Wansdyke we will see later. This triple enclosure forms a magnetic cage which forces lightning to follow the path of the menhirs.Read le secret des grandes pierres The latter have alternating polarities, ie a menhir with positive polarity at the top is followed by a menhir with negative polarity at the top. These alternated polarities form a forced pipe where lightning, by dint of rotating at speeds exceeding 94,000 miles per second, is churned and crumbles into balls of light, a lot less quick, and less dangerous too.

The lightning ballsRead L'éclair en boule are still largely little-known by research. Nevertheless they represent an unexpected solution to several major challenges facing the world today: the energy crisis, the spiritual wilderness and the fear of the future. When lightning, crumbled by churning in Avebury Henge, has been transformed into lightning balls, we can distribute that energy. This is the third step. This distribution is made in three forms; firstly, the electrical energy is used to run their machines; secondly, most of the lightning vibrates and enriches the water of Kennet River for irrigation; and thirdly, last but not least, the lightning balls collide in the magnetic field of the recipients: they receive the baptism of lightningRead Sous le feu du ciel and experience the awakeningRead Loges d'éveil of their divine powers.See page

In Avebury's power plant, the energy distribution was ensured by the system of avenues of menhirs completed by a network of relays arranged like a star. Some of these relays are still visible: the tumulus of Cheril Hill, Windmill Hill or Yatesbury. Their task was to distribute energy to machines or metallic engines,Read Technologie des dieux but also to spread it on the food crops. Read Les cités des cimes For crops, it was a thousand times better than our nitrogen fertilizers! In addition, all living beings, people, livestock, wild animals ... all of them were fortified, and even boosted.

Some people even supported that the crop circlesRead Wiltshire crop-circles common in this region, would be the work of lightning balls! One thing is sure, this clean energy, renewable, inexhaustible, had astounding features that our ancestors, of course, did not fail to use: the lightning nitrates. The natural nitrates of lightning recompose harmoniously in the sap of plants, into organic compounds favorable to their development, without producing chemical waste nor heavy pollutants. This valuable property is still well known in the countries of traditional agriculture, as we will see.
The beneficial effect of lightning is well known to African farmers, who use the land of places struck by lightning as natural fertilizer. According to them, this miraculous fertilizer boosts the yields and increases the resistance to cryptogamic diseases without any risk of over-fertilization. LightningVoir la foudre, cette inconnue might well be the spark that created life on Earth, by producing the first amino-acids in the primordial soup. The news was just recently confirmed by ... NASA!

Indeed, the US space agency NASA uses airplanes to record the effects of lightning on the atmosphere. It appears on this study that the air composition is affected by lightning. The ionization it causes creates new compounds, including ozone and natural nitrates. Nitrates? Did you say nitrates? Coming from animal liquid manure, nitrates are the basis of modern farm fertilizers. With the disadvantages of odor during spreading, and of dispersion of heavy pollutants, the manure have nearly killed a department in Brittany. And their excess leads to the proliferation of green algae, toxic but essential to the ecological balance. Finally, to fertilize agricultural lands,About so-called beginning of agriculture, please go to Il y a 10.000 ans there is no better than lightning ...

Electrical power was channeled through the rows of menhirs which formed polarized power lines. In terms of energy transmission, the Atlanteans have used other techniques: the flow of a river or a channel, or a mere trickle of water in troughs of stone, as in TiahuanacoGo to Cités des cimes in the Andes, or in pipes, as in Teotihuacan,Click + Mexico. These stone troughs, polarized as the Avebury's menhirs, were filled with water to form a power line much cheaper than the impressive menhirs of our western lines. And when it came to transport energy over long distances, they used other techniques: simple beds of pebbles arranged under some earthen levees could perform the same function.
1.9 miles south from the pyramid of Silbury Hill,Click > circulates a mysterious earthen levee quite similar to those which enclose the stone circles of Avebury Henge. Oriented west-east, this dyke is composed of three parts of 9, 14 and 12 miles long with missing areas. English people call it Wansdyke. There is little archaeological evidence about it, and its origin is unclear. To some people, it would date from the Celts. We think it is much older. Other earthen levees dotted dash the area between Avebury and Wansdyke. Could this be the remains of a "long distance"Go to Menhirs électriques power line?
