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WTC dust

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I didn't smoke pot in college, except for like, one puff a year at a frat party or something. Grad school? Yes. By that time, I knew the health benefits.
Yeah, I knew the "benefits" in the 70's. I remember............then I.......................what were we talking about again?



:cool:
 
Yay! Back to the beginning. The dust was discovered in a building that was covered in WTC dust on 9/11. I can prove this with publicly available images.

How do you know the dust didn't come from some other source before or after 9/11?

Something else I never mentioned was that there is still a lot of it left. I only took a fraction of the dust that I have found. I'll wager a big bet that there is still at least a few thousand pounds of dust that has not been recovered from the neighborhood nooks and crannies.

Lower Manhattan needs a re-cleaning, and I think that the dust still residing in buildings is a potential hazard and should be attended to.

Good! That sounds like a much more profitable use of your time that what you're doing here.
 
I don't want to read what you think of the truthers. I already know. "Chewy doesn't like truthers."

What I want to know is what they said about the dust heterogeneity. Can you remember? It's important.

Damn right I don't! :D

You know, you could always use the search function of this forum to find out. If it's important enough, you'd look for yourself.
 
I'm a research scientist, and you are not. Which means that I'm the one trained to explain previously undescribed phenomena, not you.

If you're trained to do it, then for crying out loud, WHY DON'T YOU??!!??

I think we've waited long enough, don't you?

What evidence do you think can counter metallic foam?

Why would anyone need to "counter" magnetic foam?

Can you "counter" ice cream? Can you "counter" Chicken McNuggets?

Also, the new phase is that I'm actually have original results to discuss, compared to analyzing the results of other researchers.

Nope, nope, nope. Finish the first phase first. You have made your claims, now show your support for them.
 
Why is heterogeneity important? The source of the dust (assuming you are right about it being from the WTC) was a heterogeneous collection of building materials and contents. The resulting dust being heterogeneous is expected.
 
Why is heterogeneity important? The source of the dust (assuming you are right about it being from the WTC) was a heterogeneous collection of building materials and contents. The resulting dust being heterogeneous is expected.

Depends on the exact nature of the heterogeneity, doesn't it?

I'm not talking about microscopic heterogeneity. I'm talking macroscopic.

Look at the data in this paper. It shows a high level of heterogeneity using the mass spectrometry technique mentioned so often earlier. But guess what he found? IRON! Yes, a materials science researcher found iron in the dust.
http://www.darksideofgravity.com/marseille_gb.pdf

Either way, at least some of my dust should look like the dust in this lady's hand, right? It does. But that isn't the metallic kind. The guy in Marseille, France got some of the metallic kind, but even he shows a lot of heterogeneity.
 

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If you're trained to do it, then for crying out loud, WHY DON'T YOU??!!??

I think we've waited long enough, don't you?

An internet forum isn't a seminar. I can't do it all in a forum post. Just hold on until December 1. You can do it. You've waited this long to discover what destroyed the WTC. I'm telling you my results, so don't expect any surprises at the seminar, by the way.



Why would anyone need to "counter" magnetic foam?

If I find magnetic foam in the WTC dust, that needs to be explained somehow. Counter arguments are shortened to "counter" as a verb.





Nope, nope, nope. Finish the first phase first. You have made your claims, now show your support for them.

That's not my first phase. My first phase was all my research before I got any of the dust. Now I'm in the second phase of reporting on the dust.

bold is mine
 
The testimony of a sanitation worker, who presumably has smelled a lot of smells:
"The dust was outstanding - I never smelled or tasted anything like this in my whole life - it was horrible. Orders were given to not hose down debris at the risk of destroying evidence. It got much worse, because now there was no water to hold down some of this dust. It was all over the place - It blew all over. The boats were totally filthy black, us guys were filthy. Our nose, our ears, our hair, everything about us was covered in this dust."

Former NYC Sanitation boat driver Jack Saltarella was exposed to barge loads of Ground Zero debris at Fresh Kills for 10 months and had to retire. Jack uses an inhaler to breathe at his home in New Paltz, NY, 6/27/2006.
 
Depends on the exact nature of the heterogeneity, doesn't it?
No.

I'm not talking about microscopic heterogeneity. I'm talking macroscopic.
Still not surprising. Still irrelevant.

Look at the data in this paper. It shows a high level of heterogeneity using the mass spectrometry technique mentioned so often earlier. But guess what he found? IRON! Yes, a materials science researcher found iron in the dust.
So? Why wouldn't they find iron?

Either way, at least some of my dust should look like the dust in this lady's hand, right? It does. But that isn't the metallic kind. The guy in Marseille, France got some of the metallic kind, but even he shows a lot of heterogeneity.
You can't make an accurate conclusion based on looks. Engine oil and some darker grades of maple syrup look similar. That doesn't mean they're the same.
 
No.


Still not surprising. Still irrelevant.


So? Why wouldn't they find iron?


You can't make an accurate conclusion based on looks. Engine oil and some darker grades of maple syrup look similar. That doesn't mean they're the same.

But you could call my research into question if none of my dust looked like the dust in the lady's hand. Some of it does.
 
The metallic dust looks like the stuff on top of "the meteor".

You can pick it up, but it's very crumbly.
 

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On the left is the dust as I discovered it. On the right is dust as it was discovered in the days after 9/11. This is important to my story, because it was the overall shape of the dust in the nook that caused me to recognize it for what it was. I had been studying the dust for many years, and I knew the moment I saw it I had found some. Most of it is still right there where it was laid down 9 years ago. I only took a fraction of what I saw.
 

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Here's some dust found right at Ground Zero. It looks really, really contaminated, doesn't it? There are all kinds of stuff in that dust.
 

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