6/17/2007

Probable Cause of Bee Drop?

[entire article at http://www.hyperstealth.com/haarp/index.htm]
e-address for Sutton suttonmaureen@hotmail.com

HAARP Transmissions May Accidentally be Jamming Bees Homing Ability, June 1, 2007
By Guy Cramer

Beginning in the Summer of 2006, bee hives in more than half the U.S. States, four Canadian Provinces and a number of countries in Europe have mysteriously been losing billions of bees in what is now being termed Colony Collapse Disorder. Canadian officials have yet to declare their bee losses are due to this disorder.
Mature worker bees leave the hive and do not return, leaving the queen and immature workers unable to sustain the hive. Due to the recent outbreak and distances involved in the regions affected, most researchers are unable to explain why this is occurring.
Currently one theory suggests that electromagnetic waves may be causing interference with bees’ navigation, as previous small scale research showed that 70% of the bees did not return to the hive when cordless phone transmitters were placed within the colonies. Here we show that a U.S. military radio transmitter (ionospheric heater) array, the most powerful in the world, transitioned to full power in 2006 and reception of signals transmitted cover the same region as the Colony Collapse Disorder.
The High-frequency Active Auroral Research Project is an antenna array located in Alaska. It a congressionally initiated program jointly managed by the U.S. Air Force and U.S. Navy. The Array has been used to conduct numerous ionospheric and radio wave propagation research studies over the past decade. One project study conducted in 1997 showed the radio transmission range was only received in North America and Europe. This Array transitioned to full power and military use just prior to the summer of 2006 with an increase in output from 9.6 kilowatts to 3.6 megawatts. The corresponding timing and range with the Colony Collapse Disorder suggests recent transmissions from the array could be the most likely cause of the bee problem.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

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