Can there be light below the surface of the Earth, without any exposure to the Sun? Surprisingly, the answer is YES. Bioluminescent organisms have the ability to glow almost like magic. Many organisms use their natural ability to produce light to trick predators, to attract mates and even to communicate. The word for this seemingly magical ability is called “bioluminescence,” which comes from “bio,” meaning life, and “lumin,” meaning light.
Most of these organisms, such as plankton, glow blue, but a few glow red, green, or orange. Some tiny animal plankton (zooplankton) are big enough to see with the unaided eye. Most bioluminescent zooplankton don’t glow in the dark themselves, but instead squirt globs of glowing chemicals into the water.
Some zooplankton use bioluminescence to attract a mate, or to form reproductive swarms. Not only is nature’s biochemistry fascinating, it can also be extremely beautiful, especially given the backdrop of a dark, misty cave. Glow worm is the common name for various groups of insect larvae and adult larviform females that glow through bioluminescence. They may sometimes resemble worms, but are actually insects. The glow they produce, through by a chemical reaction, is incredibly efficient; nearly 100% of the energy input is turned into light (Compare this to the best light-emitting diodes at just 24%). Australia and New Zealand have some of the most spectacular caves, where one can go on guided tours to witness this natural phenomenon up close. (see video below)
Why do some mushrooms emit light? Making light isn’t common in fungi; scientists have described about 100,000 fungal species, and only 75 glow. Lab work has shown that the glow did not happen randomly or by accident. Scientists found that these mushrooms made light mostly at night, so experiments were conducted to determine why. According to studies (referenced in the book), in dark environments, bioluminescent fruit bodies may be at an advantage by attracting insects and other arthropods that could help disperse their spores. Conditions that affect the growth of fungi, such as pH, light and temperature, have been found to influence bioluminescence, suggesting a link between metabolic activity and fungal bioluminescence.
"RL-'Programming genes' is a manner of speaking, or should I say programming DNA/RNA?. Your expertise here is beyond my paygrade but this is the basic science behind what I understand that each of us has a blueprint of our physical bodies and fate,…"
"Thanks for posting the timeline jumping instruction Eagle.
'As we mentioned earlier, the type of ascension we are speaking about begins with the simple movement of your life force up the djed, or spine, into your higher brain centers.'
Kundalini
I…"
"Drekx,
Yeah, this 'synthetic telepathy' is one peice in the jigsaw puzzle of interstellar travel/, communication technology. As far as I think, at least some ETs must be very technologicaly inclined, after all such is the picture that comes to mind…"
"AE,
It is important to note that though the ribosome reads genes like the way the microprocessor reads programs in the memory, the entire cellular work that involves reading genes is never done like reading a program at all. This is what Bruce…"
"Yes, thank you Roaring I agree with both natural and synthetic telepathy and the Sirians have an entire race of loyal androids and robots, dedicated to service and able to comms in several ways, with crew..."
"Love your human expression and resist all attempts to limit it, through artificial means, UNLESS, you have lost a limb, or a vital sense......Avoid RFID microchips and similar control devices....and I might even suggest that people limit cellphone…"
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