Jones does express doubt that the appearance of these particles resulted from boiling or evaporation but he does not express doubt that it resulted from melting. Can an office fire melt alumino-silicates and produce a swiss cheese appearance? This is an empirical question.
Forget the empirical question you raise; the premise still doesn't point at explosives being responsible for the formation of the particles. Crazy Chainsaw has noted that aluminum silicates in fly ash with chlorides and sulfides can undergo a reaction similar to what occurs in a waste incinerator. And again,
that hypothesis doesn't depend on anything other than what is expected to be found in the towers i.e. fly ash as a component of concrete, chlorides in various items like paper, sulfates in items like drywall, etc. So the question of whether office fires can cause the physical effects of the particles is irrelevant. They might, they might not, but an explanation exists that does not depend on any external influences like explosives. Occams Razor applies here.
As for “if”: perhaps you should insert that qualifier infront of your suggestions of possible contamination of the WTC Dust by welding because in fact, you have no evidence that welding during construction actually contaminated the WTC Dust. You only assume it did.
Have I ever said anything to the contrary? But in bringing that up you miss the point: It's an explanation that doesn't depend on a disproven mechanism. The assumption is valid because welding is a known source of microspheres. That I am only using supposition to arrive at the conclusion that its a possible source does not negate that fact, nor does it aid explosives hypotheses any. There is far more supposition to any proposition of explosives use than there is to welding, which was known to be done during the construction of the towers.
Moreover I was surprised to see you simply avoiding my counter arguments in post#165 pertaining to contamination caused by wleding so I will repost them in hope of a direct response...
•The welding of core and outer columns occured in an open-air environment , not in a closed environment. Hence it is very likely that any “micro”-sphericules produced would have been blown away by the wind. SKyscrapers are vey windy places you know.
•I dont know eactly what you mean by spheres produced by welding would have been “contained within the tower”. Where exactly were they contained and how? Would not rountine cleaning remove any accumulation of indoor dust particles?
I didn't intend to bypass it. You put a lot of stuff up that needed correction, and I don't remember why I skipped over it. Big deal.
Regarding wind: If such microspheres would be blown away from the wind, it would only be whatever is produced and laying on the surface of welds. Not those trapped within the welds themselves.
And also, you appear to assume that the wind scoured every corner and surface of joined segments; you'd still have the insides of welded box columns, as one example, that wouldn't be susceptible to such an effect.
And how can you not know what I mean by "contained within the tower"? The towers were eventually enclosed, and spaces within the towers were enclosed also. Would routine cleaning be done behind the walls? In all the spaces where steel members were welded together? In the elevator shafts? Within the interior spaces of the welded box columns? Just how much cleaning do you suppose was done to anything beyond the human spaces in the towers? The idea that "cleaning" would remove any particles created by welding is a ludicrous one. Cleaning is done to the human habitated spaces, not the structural supports.
•Do the iron-rich sphericules produced by welding possess the same chemical signature as the iron rich sphericules discovered by jones? Fe-O-(K)-Al-Si
•Does welding produce red chips that possess the same chemical signature as commercial thermite?
Welding is only one of the possible sources I brought up. Does it specifically produce such spheres with such chemical makeups? I don't know. But as I've said numerous times before, explosives can not have been the source of such. They are disproven for reasons I've mentioned in previous posts.
If welds are not the source, then you must also consider other chemistries, such as what Greening and Crazy Chainsaw here have discussed. Recall what I posted earlier regarding aluminosilicate sphere formation.
And the red chips? Same chemical signature as commercial thermite? Now I
know you're merely parroting conspiracy peddlers. Think about what you're saying: The red chips possessed the same "chemical signature". Well, guess what? Excluding the various "side" elements, thermite is at heart mostly aluminum and ferrous-oxide. What was the facade of the towers made of? Aluminum? What is ferrous-oxide?
Rust. Steven Jones discovered a paint chip and managed to get you fantasists to believe it was an incendiary.
If you continue to believe that these chips meant thermite, then you can answer Dr. Greening's question addressed to Steven Jones: What is Si (silicon) doing there? And since when is that an ingredient of thermite? And what about the potassium? I don't recall that being a common element in thermite, but both are found in paints. So is titanium, which was also noted in Jones's spectra, but which is not a component of thermite. And how about the chromium and calcium, also not known to be thermite ingredients?
No, welding does not produce red chips as what Jones found. But to think they're thermite is to create a whole new composition of thermite.
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I'm done, and I'm tired. I haven't even answered the previous posts yet, and there's still a lot of unsupported argumentation there. Meh... I'll answer the rest later. Don't know if it'll be this post or earlier ones, but all contain mistakes and misrepresentations that need correction.