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Polonium Halos: Unrefuted Evidence for Earth's Instant Creation!Did you know that scientific evidence abounds to support the biblical accounts of creation and the flood?Have you heard that, decades later, this evidence still stands unrefuted by the
scientific community?See ourKnoxville
News Sentinel Ad,Advertising Our Meeting on April 9, 2008.To the
contrary, this analogy demonstrates how these halos provide unambiguous evidence of both an almost
instantaneous creation of granites and the young age of the earth.Seltzer dropped into a glass of water.But if the water were instantly frozen, the bubbles would be
preserved.Likewise, polonium halos could have formed only if the rapidly "effervescing" specks of
polonium had been instantly encased in solid rock.An exceedingly large number of polonium halos are embedded in granites around the world.The occurrence of these polonium halos, then, distinctly implies that our earth was formed in
a very short time, in complete harmony with the biblical record of creation.We invite you to peruse
the points we have raised in our exchanges, consider them, and decide for
yourself the truth of the matter.In the Exchanges section of our website we've posted our letter
to Dr.Walker, requesting the references to successful granite synthesis experiments that
UT's Dr.Larry Taylor had referred to.We also have posted two letters from Dr.Brent Dalrymple
that refer to the unrefuted Polonium evidence for the creation of granite.Challenge to the National Academy of Sciences
The Academy has vehemently opposed creation science, even claiming that the evidence for creation has been
scientifically invalidated.Twenty of these
reports can be downloaded free of charge from this web site.Every proposal for an evolutionary
origin of polonium radiohalos has been systematically and experimentally falsified.No hypothetical, naturalistic
scenario has yet been suggested that can account for Creation's "tiny mystery" of the polonium halo.But if these claims had any real
substance, they would have passed peer review and been published in the open scientific literature.The fact that
they have not been, or have themselves been experimentally falsified, demonstrates the fact that this unique evidence
for Creation still stands unrefuted.Some of our newest research concerns astronomy and cosmology.Our findings provide a
radically new model of the cosmos while also showing why the Big Bang Theory is fatally flawed.For more on this topic, please see our sister site, www.Lawsuit to Regain Password for Posting Papers in Support of Scientific Creationism
Our sister site, www.Basically, what happened is that we posted ten papers outlining fatal flaws in the Big Bang theory on the arXiv,
an internet service hosted at the time by Los Alamos National Laboratory.The arXiv distributes physics papers
worldwide, and we had previously posted papers there with no problem.You can read the subsequent letters that were exchanged by clicking the links on the page
"Documentation of Censorship by the
Los Alamos National Laboratory arXiv Staff", a page on our sister site.Unable to regain our password through dialogue, we finally decided to bring suit against the parties involved.DVDs
One of the easiest ways to learn more about polonium halos and similar evidence for creation is to watch
our two videos, Fingerprints of Creation
and The Young
Age of the Earth.Book
Our book, Creation's Tiny Mystery, by scientist Robert V.The entire book may now be read online, but you'll also
want the convenience of having a printed copy to peruse.Polonium Halos: Unrefuted Evidence for Earth's Instant Creation!Offices:
HALOS
3366 Rivers Ave.SEND A KID TO SUMMER CAMP!The HALOS Vision is a community in which children and families are safe,
healthy, and productive.Religious congregations of all denominations, as well as civic groups, such as The Exchange Clubs and Amvets, have been very active and supportive of the program.Department of Social Services case workers participate voluntarily in order to receive support as well as to help educate the community about child abuse.The agreement is made between the case manager, the organization, and HALOS.The organization then spreads the word throughout its membership and collects the donations to be delivered to the case manager.HALOS is an excellent outreach opportunity for religious congregations.Civic organizations and businesses seeking a way to give back to the community also benefit from this program.If your Charleston area congregation or organization is interested in participating in this program, please contact HALOS.If you are unable to participate as a partner, please consider giving a
donation to support one of the many HALOS projects.This project was supported by Award No.Department of Justice, Office for Victims of Crime.The opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this web site are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Department of Justice.HALOS strives to improve the quality of life of children who are victims of abuse and neglect.Department of Social Service case managers have asked HALOS for small items that serve as positive reinforcement for children who are struggling with issues related to their involvement with DSS.Case managers do not have funding to offer fun experiences for children in their caseloads.These small items will brighten a child's day.They are often used in religious works to depict holy or sacred figures, and have at various periods also been used in images of rulers or heroes.Land is extravagantly said to outshine stars and sun.BC, in the Metropolitan Museum of Art.Hellenistic rulers are often shown wearing radiate crowns that seem clearly to imitate this effect.Greek practice of placing circular metal discs above the head of statues to protect them from birds and their droppings, thus anticipating the "perspectival" halo by over a millennium.The rulers of the Kushan Empire were perhaps the earliest to give themselves halos on their coins, and the nimbus in art may have originated in Central Asia and spread both east and west.Tibetan Buddhism uses halos and aureoles of many types, drawing from both Indian and Chinese traditions, extensively in statues and Thangka paintings of Buddhist saints such as Milarepa and Padmasambhava and deities.Thin lines of gold often radiate outwards or inwards from the rim of the halo, and sometimes a whole halo is made up of these.Elaborate halos and especially aureoles also appear in Hindu sculpture, where they tend to develop into architectural frames in which the original idea can be hard to recognise.Theravada Buddhism and Jainism did not use the halo for many centuries, but later adopted it, though less thoroughly than other religious groups.Muhammad leads Abraham, Moses, Jesus and others in prayer.This type seems to first appear in Chinese bronzes of which the earliest surviving examples date from before 450.Islamic art from various places and periods, especially in Persian miniatures and Moghul and Ottoman art influenced by them.The Kushan Kanishka casket of 127, with Brahma, the Buddha and Indra.The Mughal emperor Jahangir often had himself depicted with a halo of unprecedented size.Tibetan deity surrounded by an aureole of fire and smoke, 19th century.Tibetan aureoles and halos in a thangka.Though Roman paintings have largely disappeared, save some fresco decorations, the haloed figure remains fresh in Roman mosaics.In a late second century AD floor mosaic from Thysdrus, (El Djem, (illustration) Apollo Helios is identified by his effulgent halo.Nativity and Transfiguration of Christ, with cross haloes; the apostles, angels and prophets have plain ones.Initially the halo was regarded by many as a representation of the Logos of Christ, his divine nature, and therefore in very early (before 500) depictions of Christ before his Baptism by John he tends not to be shown with a halo, it being a matter of debate whether his Logos was innate from birth (the Orthodox view), or acquired at Baptism (the Nestorian view).Holy Trinity, especially Jesus, and especially in medieval art.At least in later Orthodox images, each bar of this cross is composed of three lines, symbolising the dogmas of the Trinity, the oneness of God and the two natures of Christ.In the same mosaics the accompanying angels have haloes (as, in a continuation of the Imperial tradition, does King Herod), but not Mary and Joseph.Occasionally other figures have crossed haloes, such as the seven doves representing the Seven gifts of the Holy Spirit in the 11th century Codex Vyssegradensis Tree of Jesse (where Jesse and Isaiah also have plain haloes, as do the Ancestors of Christ in other miniatures).Later, triangular halos are sometimes given to God the Father to represent the Trinity.When he is represented by a hand emerging from a cloud, this may be given a halo.Plain round halos are typically used to signify saints, the Virgin Mary, Old Testament prophets, angels, symbols of the Four Evangelists, and some other figures.Byzantine emperors and empresses were often shown with them in compositions including saints or Christ, however the haloes were outlined only.Old Testament figures become less likely to have halos in the West as the Middle Ages go on.Pope Paschal I is depicted during his lifetime, so with a square halo, c.Beatified figures, not yet canonised as saints, are sometimes shown in medieval Italian art with linear rays radiating out from the head, but no circular edge of the nimbus defined; later this became a less obtrusive form of halo that could be used for all figures.Personifications of the Virtues are sometimes given hexagonal halos.Christ or Mary, occasionally of saints (especially those reported to have been seen surrounded by one).Christ in Majesty, who may well have a halo as well.Note the haloes of the kneeling figures at the front, seen from behind.With increasing realism in painting, the halo came to be a problem for artists.So long as they continued to use the old compositional formulae which had been worked out to accommodate haloes, the problems were manageable, but as Western artists sought more flexibility in composition, this ceased to be the case.In Italy at around the same time, Pisanello used them if they did not clash with one of the enormous hats he liked to paint.Generally they lasted longer in Italy, although often reduced to a thin gold band depicting the outer edge of the nimbus, usual for example in Giovanni Bellini.Fra Angelico, himself a monk, was a conservative as far as haloes are concerned, and some of his paintings demonstrate the problems well, as in several of his more crowded compositions, where they are shown as solid gold disks on the same plane as the picture surface, it becomes difficult to prevent them obstructing other figures.Folk beliefs
In popular piety, this practice has led to the literal belief that saints have visible halos around their heads, rather than it be understood as a metaphorical representation.Some faithful believe the halo to be equivalent to the aura of some Eastern religions, and as with the latter, believe that halos are visible to those with perception (see New Age).Of the many stories about saints, some reports claimed that a saint was literally glowing.In the theology of the Eastern Orthodox Church, an icon is a "window into heaven" through which Christ and the Saints in heaven can be seen and communicated with.Dionysius the Areopagite in his Celestial Hierarcies speaks of the angels and saints being illuminated by the grace of God, and in turn illumining others.Christ has a plain halo; the Apostles only have them where they will not seriously interfere with the composition.Jesus still has a cruciform halo.In Simon Ushakov's icon of the The Last Supper (1685) eleven of the twelve apostles have halos: only Judas Iscariot does not.Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld was a member of the Nazarene movement that looked back to medieval art.However, in The Three Marys at the Tomb, 1835, only the angel has a halo.Russian icon of the Transfiguration.It came from the French "gloire" which has much the same range of meanings as "glory"."Gloriole" does not appear in this sense until 1844, being a modern invention, as a diminutive, in French also.Both "halos" and "haloes" may be used as plural forms, and halo may be used as a verb.Didron's important Christian Iconography: Or, The History of Christian Art in the Middle Ages, which by what the OED calls a "strange blunder" derived the word from the Latin "aura" as a diminutive, and also defined it as meaning a halo or glory covering the whole body, whilst saying that "nimbus" referred only to a halo round the head.However this is derived from the Italian for "almond" and, at least in describing Christian art, is usually reserved for the vesica pisces shape.In discussing Asian art, it is used more widely.Athens became a poetic commonplace in the panegyrics of the late Roman Empire.No doubt, as later, the same motif appeared in paintings, but none survive from this early.The ring of fire is ascribed other meanings in many accounts of the iconography of the Nataraja, but many other types of statue have similar aureoles, and their origin as such is clear.Schiller, Iconography of Christian Art, Vol.Johannes Diaconus gives the reason: circa verticem tabulae similitudinem, quod viventis insigne est, preferens, non coronam ("bearing around his head the likeness of a square, which is the sign for a living person, and not a crown") (Migne, Pat.Other surviving examples are Pope Hadrian I in a mural formerly in Santa Prassede, Rome, donor figures in the church at St.Paschal's mother, the rather mysterious Episcopa Theodora.Robin Margaret Jensen, Understanding Early Christian Art, p.All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.This article does not cite any references or sources.December 2006)
Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources.Gloriole) is an optical phenomenon that appears near or around the Sun or Moon, and sometimes near other strong light sources such as street lights.The particular shape and orientation of the crystals is responsible for the type of halo observed.Sometimes in very cold weather optical halos are formed by crystals close to ground level, called diamond dust.Atmospheric phenomena such as halos were used as an empirical means of weather forecasting before meteorology was developed.Sun pillar near Harpers Ferry, West Virginia.Plate crystals generally cause pillars only when the sun is within 6 degrees of the horizon, or below it; column crystals can cause a pillar when the sun is as high as 20 degrees above the horizon.Light pillars can also form around the moon, and around street lights or other bright lights.Its size depends on the size of the ice or water particles that cause it.These are also known as coronas, but are not to be confused with the thin streaming luminous gas that makes up the sun's own corona.External links
Halo in the Philippines (November 23, 2007)
Halo in Chisinau Moldova (photo and video
Halo explanations and image galleries at Atmospheric Optics
Halo reports of interesting halo observations around the World
Astronomy Picture of the Day, November 7, 2001
Light Pillars
Southern Hemisphere Halo and other atmospheric phenomena
Halo photo on EnchanteCeiling.Catalog with Photos of Types of Halos
How are glories formed?Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links.This page was last modified on 10 May 2008, at 17:46.All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
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