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November 5, 1997: Awakening to Zero Point - Gregg Braden
Published 2 years, 3 months ago
Description
Art Bell interviews former Earth scientist and aerospace engineer Gregg Braden about measurable changes occurring within the planet that ancient traditions predicted thousands of years ago. Braden explains that Earth's magnetic field has declined from a peak of 10 on a relative scale two thousand years ago to roughly 1.5 today, while the planet's base resonant frequency, historically stable at 7.8 hertz, has been rising since the mid-1980s. These two parameters appear to be converging toward what he calls zero point.
Using the analogy of copper wire wound around an iron bar, Braden describes how Earth generates its magnetic field through the rotation of inner cores around an iron center. He explains that geologic records preserved in ocean floor lava reveal at least 14 magnetic reversals in the last 4.5 million years. The most recent occurred between 10,500 and 13,000 years ago, correlating with the end of the last ice age. Ancient calendars from Mayan, Egyptian, and Tibetan traditions all terminate in this current era.
Braden presents research showing that human DNA may be a variable code responding to environmental conditions. He cites a 1996 global blood study revealing that a significant portion of the population has activated dormant genetic codes conferring high resistance to the AIDS virus. He argues that emotion serves as the biological switch controlling these genetic changes, connecting modern science to what the ancients called the technology of compassion.
Using the analogy of copper wire wound around an iron bar, Braden describes how Earth generates its magnetic field through the rotation of inner cores around an iron center. He explains that geologic records preserved in ocean floor lava reveal at least 14 magnetic reversals in the last 4.5 million years. The most recent occurred between 10,500 and 13,000 years ago, correlating with the end of the last ice age. Ancient calendars from Mayan, Egyptian, and Tibetan traditions all terminate in this current era.
Braden presents research showing that human DNA may be a variable code responding to environmental conditions. He cites a 1996 global blood study revealing that a significant portion of the population has activated dormant genetic codes conferring high resistance to the AIDS virus. He argues that emotion serves as the biological switch controlling these genetic changes, connecting modern science to what the ancients called the technology of compassion.