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Earth-penetrating tomography could also be used for minerals, and oil
exploration, as referred to in the Anchorage Daily News:
"UAF researchers have plans for HAARP's radio waves when they bounce
back to the Earth. They hope to harness the energy waves after they hit the ground
with
a small antenna affixed to a helicopter. They might be able to use the radio waves to
explore for mineral deposits and even oil... "202
Searching for oil is one of the many HAARP experiments which is not
part of the estimated $175 million budget for the first two phases of the project.
To find out more about earth-penetration mapping the authors contacted
HAARP program manager Heckscher in late February, 1995. He said it would use "in
terms of frequency, like 10 or 20 Hertz (pulses per second) or maybe one Hertz, one
cycle per second type waves."203 This range of frequencies is a very important point.
These frequencies are the same dominate frequencies within which the human brain
normally operates! This potential impact on people will be explored further in
another chapter.
The idea of using HAARP for earth-penetrating tomography was anticipated
from the very beginning of HAARP. That this tool could be used to produce this "by-
product" was always known but downplayed in the records. However, the usage must
have been promoted in selling the project to the United States Senate, The unexpected
result was that the Senate gave priority to this aspect.
The fact that the system will send a huge amount of energy into the
ionosphere, and return a large portion of that energy to the earth, with possible
ionospheric amplifications or induced charged particle rain, is alarming. Potential
environmental implications have not been fully disclosed and most likely are not
well understood.
These uses were never discovered by those opposed to the HAARP project
until late 1994, and only confirmed by a review of the Congressional Record at that
time. Formal objections to the nondisclosure of the biological effects of ELF on
living things in the earth-penetrating tomography application of the technology
were filed with various governmental agencies, but to no avail. We could not clearly
find out the facts until late January 1995, much after the regulating authorities had
already granted the go-ahead for HAARP testing. The only remaining barrier to
HAARP raised by the United States Senate was the question of funding. This question
was partially resolved in the 1996 defense budget funding that included $10 million
for HAARP, 20% of the total allocated for counterproliferation projects.
Generation of ELF/VLF Waves
These kinds of waves are used for DoD communication systems. Currently,
waves are produced "from the Navy's existing antenna systems in Wisconsin and
202 "Transmitter Plan Leaves Public Uneasy", Anchorage Daily News, pages B-1 and B-3.
203 Interview of John Heckscher, HAARP Program Manager, with Jeane Manning, 2-21-1995.