(=1). A thin layer of pure water vapour
may therefore have the capacity to resist
the transfer of enormous charges, per-
mitting the accumulation of very large
voltages and potential. The concentric
layers of water vapour with a tempera-
ture of 4°C may thus act like a spherical
condenser, formed of nesting spheres
which charge the Earth with energy.
- Being in a lower dynamic and more har-
 monically stabilized energetic state, the
 greater density of water vapour at increas-
 ingly lower altitudes may well correspond
 through resonance to the lower wave-
 lengths of the incident radiation, whose
 frequency has been reduced by contact
 with the braking effect of the atmosphere,
 thus creating the medium with which ra-
 dio-waves are reflected back to Earth.
- For elaboration of how this can be
 demonstrated, the reader may read Coats'
 description of Lord Kelvins and Walter
 Schauberger's experiments (Living Ener-
 gies, pp. 95-99).
- Leopold Brandstatter, Implosion statt Ex-
 plosion, self-publication, Linz 10, Fach 20,
 Austria.
- Living Energies, p. 100.
- Kenneth David and John Day: Water —
 The Mirror of Science, p. 149, Heinemann
 Educational, 1964.
- A 1°C rise in temperature causes the re-
 tention, but not necessarily an even dis-
 tribution, of an additional 1,000 million
 cubic metres of water vapour in the at-
 mosphere (Living Energies,]). 100).
- The Nature of Water
- Our Senseless Toil, Pt.I, p. 11.
- See The Divining Hand by Christopher
 Bird.
- Davis, K.A. and Day, J.A., Water — The
 Mirror of Science, 1964.
- Implosion magazine, no.8., 1945.
- How to obtain safe drinking water is
 dealt with in Chapter 12.
- Viktor first came to the attention of hy-
 drologists in 1922 with his revolutionary
 water-flume design for transporting logs
 inexpensively from inaccessible un-
 touched mountain forests without the
 usual high rate of damage of conven-
 tional methods. This, his first encounter
 with opposition from the scientific es-
 tablishment, is well described in both
Living Water and in Living Energies.
- The extra 'e' enlarges the meaning of the
 usual carbon,' to include a whole range of
 elements used in forming the physical
 structures of life (see further on p. 51).
- Viktor Schauberger, Our Senseless Toil,
 Pt.I, p. 4.
- The Hydrological Cycle
- The Memory of Water — Homeopathy
 and the Battle of Ideas in the New Science
 by Michel Schiff, Thorsons, 1995. Callum
 Coats has more on Benveniste's research
 and the controversy around it, in Living
 Energies, pp. 119-121.
- The temperatures indicated on the fol-
 lowing diagrams do not necessarily con-
 form to actual temperatures, but are in-
 tended to demonstrate the process.
- The Formation of Springs
- The French for spring is source.
- Callum Coats adopted an impeller design
 taken from Schauberger's 1936 patent for
 an air turbine.
- Rivers and How they Flow
- From Viktor Schauberger's treatise,'Tem-
 perature and the Movement of Water'
 ('Temperatur und Wasserbewegung'): Die
 Wasserwirtschaft, No.20,1930.
- Schauberger also pioneered new designs
 and built fourteen such dams. For infor-
 mation on this, see Living Energies pp.
 159,160, and The Water Wizard, pp. 101,
 121,122-34,209.
- See also The Water Wizard, p. 207.
- Schauberger established that turbulence
 was a natural automatic acceleration-re-
 stricting brake in flowing water, in a trea-
 tise he published entitled 'Turbulence.'
- Callum Coats in Living Energies, pp.
 176-7 describes one he saw.
- Supplying Water
- The Ecologist, May 30,1999.
- International Water Management Insti-
 tute.
- Guardian Weekly, March 14,2001. The
 UN Department of Economic and Social
 Affairs estimated that six countries will
 account for half the increase: India,
Bangladesh, Pakistan, China, Indonesia
and Nigeria. Their startling projection is
based on the assumption that fertility
will continue to decline. The population
explosion would be even more dramatic
but for the HIV/AIDS epidemic. The re-
port noted that increased international
migration would be one consequence.
The pressure on food resources will be
enormous, but the impact on water sup-
plies for the developing countries will be
nothing less than catastrophic.
- National Geographic magazine,'Earth's
 Fresh Water under Pressure,' Sep. 2002
- The Ecologist, May 30,1999.
- National Geographic magazine, ibid.
- The Ecologist, May 30,1999.
- Ibid., Caspar Henderson.
 9.^ Ibid.
- Viktor Schauberger, Our Senseless Toil.
- Fluoride — Drinking Ourselves to Death?
 by Barry Groves is a well-informed
 source of factual information on this
 subject. (Gill and Macmillan, 2001)
- Ibid.
- Waldblott, McKinney and Burgstahler:
 Fluoridation: The Great Dilemma, Coron-
 ado Press, 1978:288.
- Jour. Dent. Res. 1990; 69:723-7.
- 'Living in a democratic fluoridated coun-
 try,' Australian Fluoridation News,
 Sep-Oct l995;31(5).
- Barry Groves, Fluoride: Drinking our-
 selves to Death?, p. 227. Gill and Macmil-
 lan, 2001.
- Viktor Schauberger, Nature as Teacher, p. 5.
- The best ones have a four-stage system:
 ceramic for bacteria, carbon for chemi-
 cals and organic contaminants, ion ex-
 change for heavy metals, and block car-
 bon for final cleansing; the filters being
 easy to change, every six months.
- We discussed higher energies interpene-
 trating our physical world in Chapter 2.
- Our Senseless Toil, Pt. II, p. 14.
- The energies are essentially dynagens, or
 growth-promoting, created by the bio-
 metal composition — silver (male), and
 copper (female); the silver also has bacte-
 ricidal properties. Dynagens are also pro-
 duced by the centripetal movement of the
 main water body flowing down the cen-
 tre, raising the overall vitality, life-energy
 and wholesomeness of the water.
- Callum Coats describes these experi-
 ments in detail in Living Energies.
ENDNOTES