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I think that's the answer right there.
Bybyots
You can see it in the elongated skull that was displayed by Brien Foerster in that video on the Peruvian skulls. He claims there are no parietal plates
SLAYER69
reply to post by jadedANDcynical
Wow
Thanks for the insightful post.
great question
What creates the order.
In general relativity, a white hole, is a hypothetical region of spacetime which cannot be entered from the outside; but matter and light can escape from it. In this sense, it is the reverse of a black hole, which can be entered from the outside, but from which nothing, including light, has the ability to escape. White holes appear in the theory of eternal black holes. In addition to a black hole region in the future, such a solution of the Einstein field equations has a white hole region in its past.[1] However, this region does not exist for black holes that have formed through gravitational collapse, nor are there any known physical processes through which a white hole could be formed.
SLAYER69
Milky Way galaxy may have formed inside-out
21 Jan 2014 , 13:59
Thoughts?edit on 21-1-2014 by SLAYER69 because: (no reason given)
I once made a cheesy galaxy animation using Blender - added a magnetic field source and a gravity source to model the black hole at the center of the galaxy, and some particles to model the stars.
The funny thing was that the shape of the "galaxy" was determined by the orientation of the spin axis of the black hole (and magnetic field). If the spin axis was close to perpendicular to the plane of the galaxy, then there would be two "jets" of stars being fired outwards into space. In my model, these ended up returning to the distant edge of the galaxy. Perhaps in a real galaxy, stars get spaghetti-fied into elemental gas and propelled out into space by the magnetic field before being returned back to the galaxy.
At large scales, all small magnetic fields merge into a dominant donut shaped bipolar field eg. The Sun, Earth and other planets. So perhaps that happens to the galaxy as well. What happens to all those little stellar magnetic fields. Given all those stars are unconstrained, they should eventually all line up and synchronise like metronomes.edit on 22-1-2014 by stormcell because: (no reason given)
Bybyots
reply to post by lostbook
I think that's the answer right there.
Well, it might be, but I don't know what it is an answer to. Snail shells twist clockwise as they grow, trees twist as they grow, everything twists as it grows.
You can see it in the elongated skull that was displayed by Brien Foerster in that video on the Peruvian skulls. He claims there are no parietal plates, but you can see that there are two; one's just twisted back in clock-wise fashion, just as one would expect from head-binding. The twisting doesn't stop.
That's the thing to know, I think, that two forces in the universe that are connected with life are twisting and extrusion.
We are extruded in to this place from nowhere.
It's weird.
Bybyots
reply to post by lostbook
I think that's the answer right there.
Well, it might be, but I don't know what it is an answer to. Snail shells twist clockwise as they grow, trees twist as they grow, everything twists as it grows.
You can see it in the elongated skull that was displayed by Brien Foerster in that video on the Peruvian skulls. He claims there are no parietal plates, but you can see that there are two; one's just twisted back in clock-wise fashion, just as one would expect from head-binding. The twisting doesn't stop.
That's the thing to know, I think, that two forces in the universe that are connected with life are twisting and extrusion.
We are extruded in to this place from nowhere.
It's weird.