Masters of Health Magazine December 2020 | Page 69

Moving Heavy Objects with Sound!

By Jill Mattson

Throughout antiquity, and various locations throughout the world there are stories, including eyewitness's accounts of a technology to move heavy objects through sound vibration.

I read one account in antiquity in which a row of monks moved heavy boulders up a towering mountain with a series of sounds from elongated horns.

The Bible reports that the walls of Jericho were tumbled by the Israelites surrounding the city for seven days with special sounds from horns.

A story reiterated by Edgar Cayce on how the ancient Atlanteans built the pyramid using sound/vibration technologies. Cayce said that they literally floated massive 10,000 ton cut pieces of granite on vibrational waves with just a small crew of men using their advanced sound technologies to build one of the largest manmade structures on the Planet to this - the great Cheops pyramid.

Below is a chapter on moving heavy objects with sound. He offers his book as a free download on the Internet! (The book has illustrations...that I can not copy into these newsletters.)

Acoustic Levitation of Stones by Bruce Cathie

Monastery construction, Tibetan style

according to Swedish Designer Henry Kjellson

The steep mountain side is on the right. In the center is the stone block, and on the left are the priests and musicians. S=big drum, M=medium drum, T=trumpeter. Inset shows method of suspending drum, and gives an idea of its size. As shown here, Kjellson says, the 200 priests are waiting to take up their positions in straight lines of 8 or 10 behind the instruments, 'like spokes in a wheel.' Unlikely as it may seem, this operation has an intriguing precision, made slightly more so by Kjellson's meticulously detailed description.

Tibetan Monks levitate stones by using an acoustic levitation technique with the aid of drams in this 1939 sketch by Swedish aircraft designer Henry Kjellson.

A New Zealand scientist recently gave me an intriguing extract from an article published in a German magazine, relating to a demonstration of levitation in Tibet. After obtaining a translation by a German journalist, in English, I was amazed at the information contained in the story, and was surprised that the article had slipped through the suppression net which tends to keep such knowledge from leaking out to the public.

All the similar types of stories that I had read up until now were generally devoid of specific information necessary to prove the veracity of the account. In this case a full set of geometric measurements were taken, and I discovered, to my great delight, that when they were converted into their equivalent geodetic measures, relating to grid harmonics the values gave a direct association with those in the unified harmonic equations published in my earlier works.

The following extracts are translations taken from the German article: 'We know from the priests of the far east that they were able to lift heavy boulders up high mountains with the help of groups of various sounds... the knowledge of the various vibrations in the audio range demonstrates to a scientist of physics that a vibrating and condensed sound field can nullify the power of gravitation. Swedish engineer Olaf Alexanderson wrote about this phenomenon in the publication, Implosion No. 13.