Data on air tests performed in the
Phoenix area. These charts show a number heavy metals
are present in the environment at levels far exceeding
the safe toxic level standards for human health. The air
sampling was analyzed by a professional laboratory.
DATA
COLLECTION METHOD
a.
Air was sampled through an air filter which operated
approximately 4 hours during the day and 4 hours after
sunset for 28 days.
b.
Method used by the test laboratory was defined as "ICP
scan, inorganic analysis."
c.
Short columns in the charts indicate the maximum safe
level for a given metal. Tall columns are the measured
amounts found in the filter for a given metal.
d.
MCL = Maximum Containment Level
e.
Chart values are shown in parts per billion. To convert
any reading to parts per million (which is often more
convenient for a mental comparison) simply drop three
zeroes from any value shown on any chart.
f.
The
calculations on how many times each metal is over each
toxic health limit. For example, in Fig. 1 barium is 278
times (or 278x) higher than the toxic health limits set
by federal standards. |
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Fig 1 In this chart we see that barium is 278x the
toxic limit, copper is 98x the toxic limit, manganese is a staggering
5,820x the toxic limit and zinc is 593x the toxic limit.
Noteworthy here is that manganese is an element
commonly found in the environment and soil in small quantities. However,
manganese is also a toxic element. This element is the black electrolyte
material found in batteries (dry cell types) before the advent of
alkaline batteries took over the battery market. Manganese is still used
in cheap batteries and commonly provided with remote controls.
Barium, copper and zinc are also heavy metals.
Copper and zinc are used by the human body's metabolism but only in very
small amounts. Barium is a common contrast agent used for X-ray
diagnostic imaging, but it is not used in powder form. It is suspended
in a liquid form for contrast enhancement of X-rays to outline digestive
tract soft tissue. |
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Barium and aluminum (more on aluminum
later) are commonly found in chemtrail fallout. These two compounds were
also described by Dr. Teller in his weather modification paper as two
possible agents that could be spread by aircraft into the upper
atmosphere. His intention was to use them as reflective agents for
sunlight in an effort to reduce global heating.
However, anyone who has ever been inside a tent an
hour or more after the sun comes up on a cool day knows it will get hot
inside quite fast. It could be that Teller's theory is flawed, and that
instead of reflecting the sunlight barium and aluminum are accelerating
global warming. After several decades of chemtrail spraying weather
records clearly show our planet is not cooling off. In the spring of
2008, the US army announced the problem is with the Sun and that global
warming is not directly caused by civilization.
Fig 2 Here we see that cadmium is 126x the toxic
limit, chromium is 282x the toxic limit and nickel is 169x the toxic
limit. Note that the permissible amount of Cadmium in the environment is
equivalent to a tiny ten parts per billion.
These metals are commonly used for steel
manufacturing and electro- plating. All are toxic in significant amounts.
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Fig. 3 Here aluminum is a staggering 6,400x the
toxic limit, iron is 28,000x the toxic limit, magnesium is 5.3x the
toxic limit, potassium is 793x the toxic limit and sodium is 15.9x the
toxic limit.
SPECIAL TEST RESULTS FOR ALUMINUM
According to the reader providing the data, for
unknown reasons aluminum results are commonly provided by an "out of
state test lab." It's also interesting that of all the contaminants,
aluminum had the highest reading of all metals over the safe toxic limit
by 6,400x. I will not comment here on my opinion as to who may run that
lab or the data source, but will leave that to the reader's imagination.
As bad as aluminum being 6,400 times the toxic limit it may also be that
the actual level of aluminum is far higher than what we see here.
Although physically lighter in weight than steel or
other metals, aluminum is still considered a heavy metal. Like Teflon®,
aluminum is very difficult to remove from the human body.
It is also well known that for unknown reasons,
aluminum has been found in higher than normal concentrations in the
brains of deceased Alzheimer's patients. It is also known that
Alzheimer's disease is on the rise. Perhaps finally a connection can be
made here as to the source of the illness, but more science would need
to be done to confirm this. A correlation between aluminum levels in the
air for various cities and Alzheimer's statistics needs to be made. This
is outside the scope of this report.
Clearly, there must be a source for these very high
levels of heavy metals in the Phoenix environment. It could very well be
a direct result of chemtrail spraying, since the trails have been
commonly seen in the sky over Phoenix and other cities. If these levels
are elevated in Phoenix's air, it may stand to reason that the same
problem is happening all over the country elsewhere. It's quite possible
that these various metals are elevated in different amounts in the air
over other cities. More tests like this are needed for other cities,
with air sampling and analysis performed in the exact same way to allow
proper correlation.
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