I
am assured by fundamentalist Christians that six thousand years ago
God created the world in six days. Of course, six thousand years ago a day was
about the shortest period of time humans could measure accurately.
And the mystical number six is also the number of sides to the
electromagnetic spaces that give cell phones their name. Within each
10 square mile cell surrounding every tower, 832 separate
frequencies are used, two frequencies for every individual phone
conversation. For the last half century the preferred method for
defining these frequencies, the time between each electromagnetic
wave crest, has been to hit a ball of 10 million pure cesium atoms
with a microwave beam. The cesium then produces one energy wave crest
9 billion, 192 million, 631 thousand 770 times every second and
will maintain that exact frequency, it is estimated, for about 20
million years. And 20 million beats 6 thousand any day of the week.
The
only problem is that pure cesium is rare. The metal is so it eager to
combine with oxygen that on contact it instantly steals water's two
oxygen atoms, thereby generating enough heat to visibly explode the
now free hydrogen atom like a mini-Hindenburg. Given a little time
cesium will even dissolve glass to steal its oxygen. Cesium is only
stable in nature in a rare rock called Pegmatite (above), and 82 % of all the
cesium rich Pegmatite known to exist on earth has been found in one
place, beneath a single narrow lake along the Bird River in
Manitoba, Canada, a land unknown in 1656, to the Archbishop of
Ireland.
In
retrospect the Irish primate James Ussher (above) seems an unlikely source for
300 years of dogmatic intellectual stagnation. In life he was a
purveyor of political compromises. Ussher's “Annales veteris
testamenti” (Annals of the Old Testament), published in 1650,
displayed his love of dusty manuscripts, esoteric minutiae and
ancient languages. As an academic it was his judgment the world began
after sunset on Sunday 23 October, 4004 B.C. He was using the best
evidence available at the time, and disagreed about the date for
creation with the Oxford mathematician Sir Isaac Newton by just four
years.
Bernic
Lake is about 60 miles northeast of Winnipeg, just beyond the western
edge of the Canadian Shield. But on this spot two and a half billion
years ago, Precambrian rains fell upon sterile volcanic basalt of the
shield, chemically altering and eroding the rock into the world wide
ocean, laying down oxygen poor sediments called Greenstone belts.
These belts were buried and heated, compressed and folded at least
three times, beginning two billion years ago with the advent of plate
tectonics, until eventually batholiths of a new rock, granite, rose
and (above) intruded the Greenstrones at depth. And at one batholith, about
15 miles due west of today's small community of Lac du Bonnet,
Manitoba, cracks in the Greenstone were injected with chemically rich
waters from the granite, concentrating a potpourri of rare earth
metals, lithium, beryllium, tantalum and cesium.
Sir
Isaac Newton's modern fame is that of the discoverer of gravity, the
inventor of calculus and optics and his three Laws of Motion. When
praised by his contemporaries Newton explained he stood on the
shoulders of geniuses. But the great economist John Maynard Keynes
also called him “the last of the magicians.” Newton devoted most
of his time and effort to alchemy, and his search for the
Philosopher's Stone, which would magically turn lead into gold.
Newton was no more a fool, than Bishop Ussher. But both of men were of their age, and they lacked the technology to more precisely measure the world.
The
Bird River flows through the largest remaining, seemingly eternal,
boreal forest on earth. It is an awe inspiring terrain, but capable
of supporting only two humans per square mile. Since 1929 some 60
families in Lac du Bonnet have depended upon the Cabot Corporation's
Tanco mine (above) to earn a living. Since the middle of the 1990's, each
year's 30,000 kilograms of cesium extracted from the great rock rooms
beneath Bernic Lake, have been destined to lubricate and cool oil
drilling equipment world wide, in the form of caesium formate. The
tiny fraction used in atomic clocks would never economically justify
keeping the mine open. But there is enough profitable cesium under
Bernic Lake to last another ten years. If the mine does not swallow
the lake first.
At
room temperature a single atom of cesium has 55 electrons in six
orbits around its nucleus - two in the first level, eight in the
second, eighteen in both the third and fourth, eight in the fifth and
a lone single electron on the outside or valance level. It is the
valance electron that emits energy at a specific frequency when
excited by microwaves, as was first predicted in 1945 by Professor
Isidor Rabi from Columbia University. With all due respect to
Professor Rabi, he was not smarter than Newton, but as Newton put it,
Rabbi was standing on Newton's shoulders. Seven years later the
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) built the first
cesium atomic clock. They kept perfecting and miniaturizing the
design until about 1968, when they established the highest standard
of measurement - until recently
Until
1989 cesium sold for less than $5 a gram (above). Then came the invention of
cesium formate, a slurry that was liquid enough to lubricate drilling
bits, and heavy enough improve drill efficiency and to carry rock
back up the bore hole, while enduring the temperatures and pressures
found thousands of feet underground. By 1998 the price of 99% pure
cesium was over $60 a gram. It was then that Cabot decided to
maximize profits by extracting even the ore holding the up the roof
of their mine. They shaved away the pillars supporting the ceiling,
from 50 feet in diameter to just 25. In 2012 the price of cesium was
$70.60 a gram. Then, in 2013, Cabot admitted that over the past three
years at least a ton of rock had fallen into their mine because “The
crown pillar...is unstable and requires immediate action”.
The
accuracy of cesium clocks is now the limiting factor in available cell
phone channels, the accuracy of Global Positioning systems, higher
precision and versatility in the electrical grid and better science
in every field. So in the new generation of clocks, the NIST-F2,
introduced on 3 April 2014, the chamber containing the cesium ball is
chilled to minus 316 degrees Fahrenheit (-193 ÂșC). This does not
change the frequency of the cesium, but it eliminates much of the
“noise” of all the other atoms in the chamber, so the call of
that single valance election can be more clearly heard and more
closely defined. Instead of losing a second every 20 million years,
the NIST-F2 loses a second every 300 million years. With this the
internet will get faster, cell phones will get more versatile and
dependable and there will be more profit and better lives for every
living human on earth.
Bernic
Lake (above) will drown Cabot's golden goose and the world's primary source
of cesium within three years, unless something is done. Cabot's
solution is to bulldoze a new road through the virgin forest, build
dikes across the lake, and “de-water” the now isolated section
over their mine. In Cabot's opinion, this provides “an
optimal solution, in that it eliminates the immediate risk of
flooding, minimizes the long-term footprint of the project, and
upholds Cabot’s corporate commitment to being responsive,
responsible and respected citizens...”. It will also keep oil
pouring into pipelines around the world, and profits pouring into the
pockets of Cabot directors and majority stockholders. It will
continue to pour $28 million a year into the Lac du Bonnet economy,
and save 150 jobs in Manitoba. It will also provide cesium for new NIST-F2 clocks world wide. And it may kill the three mile long Bernic
Lake, and poison the Bird River, the Winnipeg River and Lake Winnipeg
which all those sources pour into.
About
six thousand years ago a Sumerian Michelangelo crafted an 8 foot
long, 3 foot wide copper tribute to his God, the powerful lion headed
eagle Imdugud (above). Copper was a new medium six thousand years ago. The metal has two electrons in its first orbit, eight in the
second, eighteen in the third, and like cesium, a single electron in
the valance level. But unlike cesium, when exposed to oxygen and
moisture, copper only slowly forms a layer of green verdigris,
or copper carbonate, which then shields the underlying metal from
further corrosion.
The Imdugud frieze, found in the ancient city of al' Urbaid, has been dated using carbon 14 techniques, which uses the science developed by Newton and extended by Professor Isidor Rab. The science of chemistry and metallurgy tells us the ore for the frieze came from mines in present day Iran, mines whose tailings and waste rocks were scavenged for copper not long after Bishop Ussher's birth date for the universe. Perhaps the ore was carried to Ubaid in a ship powered by a sail, an invention which also made its first appearance about 6,000 years ago, as dated from the images painted on pottery, an unbroken line of which can be followed style change by style change, over the last six thousand years.
In the past Christianity has denied that atoms decayed, that sunlight could be split into a spectrum, that the sun was at the center of the solar system, that anything existed before sunset Sunday, 23 October, 4004 B.C. None of those contentions proved or disproved the existence of God. And eventually each, and a thousand others, were discarded, without destroying the faith of the faithful. Only insisting that ignorance is truth, that hypocrisy is devotion, taking his name in vain and by mistaking your will for God's will threatens the existence of God..
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