Hidden Nature

(Dana P.) #1

  1. By installing flow-deflecting guides which direct the flow of
    water at the bends towards the centre of the river and simultane-
    ously cause the creation of cooling longitudinal vortices. Viewed
    along the direction of flow, these induce anti-clockwise rotating
    vortices at left hand bends and clockwise vortices at right hand
    bends.
    The flow-guide or vortex generator (see Fig. 11.3) is made of pre-
    cast concrete, its curved surface fluted with grooves running paral-
    lel to the direction of flow, to prevent any lateral slip. It is triangular
    in shape, the apex pointing downstream. The wider, upstream end
    of the triangle is horizontal and flush with the riverbed, so as to
    scoop up the onflowing water and curl it over centripetally
    (inwardly spiralling) into a vortex in the centre of the channel. This
    movement gathers up the suspended and dissolved growth-
    enhancing substances (carbones), from near the banks and the
    riverbed, allowing them to mix with the dissolved oxygen which in
    all healthy streams collects in the central flow axis.
    These (negatively-charged) fructigenic carbones become ener-
    gized when moved centripetally and are thus able to combine with
    the fertilizing (positively charged) oxygen. The oxygen is cooled by
    a positive temperature gradient, resulting in a freshening and rein-
    vigorating of the water. At the shallower parts of the river between
    the bends, the accumulated energies from this organic synthesis
    allow the discharge of nourishing salts into the groundwater in the
    banks.^3

  2. By the implanting of 'energy-bodies' in midstream, anchored
    to the river bed, which re-energize the water by forming natural lon-
    gitudinal vortices. These would be used where the flow-guides are
    inappropriate — in the straighter stretches of a channel for
    instance — and where the removal of sediment is desirable.
    Although never described by Viktor Schauberger in detail, these
    could take the form of egg-shaped longitudinal vortex-generators
    with neutral buoyancy achieved through small holes allowing pen-
    etration of the outer water. Schauberger may have applied this prin-
    ciple from observing the stationary trout.
    Vortices may also be introduced by placing large (preferably met-
    alliferous) boulders in the centre of the channel. Schauberger found
    that the boulders that 'floated' in a very cold stream contained metal
    oxides and silicates, so these stones would actually increase the

  3. RIVERS AND HOW THEY FLOW

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