Making Gold
Again, anybody capable of interstellar travel would also be capable of manufacturing any quantity of gold he might need so that there is no real way to believe that anybody ever came to Earth from other stars in past ages, in search of gold.
But that raises a question: How exactly do you make gold?? Or any other heavy metal for that matter?
Also for that matter, why do we even have any heavy metals near the surface of our own planet? Shouldn't heavy metals have all sank to the planets core as the planet was forming, at least according to standard theories?
Evidence indicates that the heavy metals arrived or were created here, AFTER the planet was already formed and solidified. That is, either arrived via impact events or was formed via plasma physics phenomena most likely involving arc discharges.
We don't find a whole lot of gold or uranium in meteors or asteroids that fall to Earth; what about the other possibility, i.e. what about arc discharges in past ages??
Consider the Grand Canyon...
The Grand Canyon is an example of the case in which both the evolutionists and the creationists are wrong. Both assume that the Canyon was created by water, the only difference between the two positions being the amount of time involved.
The sedimentary layers which you see along the walls of the Canyon were certainly put down by water but the Canyon itself was not created by water. There are several problems:
- Real super rivers (Volga, Amazon) are shallow and you can wade out quite a ways before getting to chest deep water. That is in sharp contrast with the 2000 foot straight drop of the Canyon.
- Real rivers wear rocks and stones smooth; you will never pick up a jagged rock in the bottom of a river. All of the canyons stones and rocks are jagged and pristine, even rocks on mesas which would have been hundreds of feet under water had water ever flowed to the top of the Canyon.
- Real rivers have finite numbers of tributaries, unlike the fractal topography of the Canyon with its innumerable sinuous rilles.
- Finally, there is the question of the material from the Canyon which, by all rights (assuming the Canyon to have been created by water) should be piled up in a gigantic heap where the Colorado River used to empty into the Pacific Ocean… That material, of course, is simply missing.
The fractal topography of the Canyon is precisely what you see in the case of lightning strikes on Rocky ground and you can create a miniature such Canyon for yourself with an arc welder if you like.
The Canyon, in real life, is an electrical scar created by an arc discharge between earth and some other very large body, most likely Mars. The material was simply vaporized and blasted into space.
You would think that such an event, that is an electrical arc discharge between Earth and Mars, would have left similar features on Mars... Guess what, it did. The similar feature is called Valles Marinaris, and is actually very much larger than the Grand Canyon.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valles_Marineris
What About Gold
If the original guess here is reasonable, you'd expect to find gold in the neighborhood of the Grand Canyon. I asked OpenAI (chatGPT) about that:
GungaSnake:
Has gold ever been found or mined in or in the vicinity of the Grand Canyon?
ChatGPT
Gold has been found and mined in the vicinity of the Grand Canyon, particularly in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The Grand Canyon is located in Arizona, a state with a rich history of mining, and gold was one of the valuable minerals sought by prospectors in the region.One of the notable gold mining areas near the Grand Canyon is the Gold Road Mine, which was situated in the Black Mountains not far from the western part of the Grand Canyon. This mine was active in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and produced a significant amount of gold.
Additionally, gold deposits were discovered in other areas of northern Arizona, such as the Prescott and Bradshaw Mountains, which are not too far from the Grand Canyon. These discoveries led to gold rushes and mining operations in the region.
While gold mining in the Grand Canyon itself is not common due to the protected status of the national park, the surrounding areas have seen historical mining activities for various minerals, including gold. It's important to note that mining practices and regulations have evolved over time, and today there are strict environmental and conservation regulations in place to protect the natural beauty of the Grand Canyon.
Problem Solved
That seems to be the answer to the question: What do the Anunnaki do if they find themselves needing a lot of gold al of a sudden? The answer seems to be that if you get enough electricity together in a confined space and you make some kind of a science out of it, you can turn anything reasonably heavy more or less into gold and/or other heavy metals.
How old is the Earth, you ask...
An observant reader will likely notice that this little exercise makes a shambles of the dating schemes that rely on ratios of heavy metal isotopes, and that estimates of the Earth's age based on such schemes are basically worthless.
The Ganymede Hypoothesis (on Amazon.com)
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