Zachary K. Hubbard Video Channel

Sunday, March 9, 2014

33 Watch: Nuclear Fracking


You've probably heard of the dangerous practice of hydraulic "fracking" for natural gas and the environmental consequences that come with it.  What you might not have heard about however, is "nuclear fracking", an experimental practice that began with the Federal Government in New Mexico in 1967, and has supposedly been discontinued.  To learn more about this topic, let us read the following portion of Forbe's January 29, 2014 article on the subject.
In December, 1967, scientists from the Atomic Energy Commission and officials from the U.S. Bureau of Mines and El Paso Natural Gas Company gathered at a gas well in northern New Mexico, near Farmington. They lowered a 29-kiloton nuclear device more than 4,000 feet down the shaft and set it off.  It worked.
“The 4,042-foot-deep detonation created a molten glass-lined cavern about 160 feet in diameter and 333 feet tall,” according to the American Oil and Gas Historical Society. “It collapsed within seconds. Subsequent measurements indicated fractures extended more than 200 feet in all directions – and significantly increased natural gas production.”
The Atomic Energy Commission tried twice more. In 1969 they set off a 43-kiloton nuclear bomb in an 8,500-foot deep well near Rulison, Colorado. In  1973 they set off three 33-kiloton bombs in a single well near Rifle, Colorado. In all three tests, they collaborated with the local gas utilities.
The tests were part of the Plowshare Program—a government initiative to find peaceful uses for nuclear explosions—which was discontinued in 1975.
 My first question is, how do they know the initial detonation was 333-feet tall if it was more than 4,000 feet beneath the surface of the earth, and only lasted for a matter of seconds?  My second question is, why was a 33-kilton bomb used for the third test?

Perhaps we should revisit history for answers to these questions, as well as the numerology of the word nuclear.
  • Nuclear = 5+3+3+3+5+1+9 = 29, reduces to 11
    • Notice the coded 333 in the word "nuclear"
The first nuclear test, in the history of the earth, was the "Trinity Test", which took place on July 16, 1945; a date with a numerology of 33.  The first bombing of a city occurred on August 6, 1945, with the destruction of Hiroshima.  This date also has a numerology of 33.
  • July 16, 1945 = 7/16/1945 = 7+1+6+1+9+4+5 = 33
  • August 6, 1945 = 8/6/1945 = 8+6+1+9+4+5 = 33
To read more about the Manhattan Project, the project that gave birth to nuclear weapons and technology, please click here.
  • Manhattan = 4+1+5+8+1+2+2+1+5 = 29, reduces to 11
  • Project = 7+9+6+1+5+3+2 = 33
    • 11, 22 and 33 are the "master numbers"
    • Manhattan Project = 11 33

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.