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lay people, all over the world are beginning to let their ideas be felt on this very
important issue. Elsewhere in this microbook is an essay on creating political
realities. We ask all of our readers to consider taking a step for change and activating
some of the ideas contained in that essay.
LOOKING THROUGH THE EARTH
Radio Tomography of Geologic Strata
By Brooks A. Agnew
When the energy crisis of the 1970's seemed real enough to affect the prices
of crude oil sufficiently to inspire domestic drilling, it seemed everyone wanted to
invest in oil & gas. Drillers resurrected shallow rigs from old Ingersoll Rand units to
even older hammer drillers. Lease speculation was very lucrative. Even owners of
fields of sagebrush or Kentucky fescue were making millions of dollars off high
density drilling - called "checkerboards " by oil drillers - whether they found oil or
not. The people who ended up paying in the long run were the taxpayers. One of the
very nice enticements to invest in oil speculation was the tax break.
This environment meant that there was often funding for new technology
which could offer some advantage over the normal ten percent odds of locating a
wildcat well. Such was the case for a visionary approach to oil and gas exploration.
My theory was that each chemical bond had a resonant frequency which could be
detected and mapped if excited with harmonic wavelengths of radiation at low power
levels. This was already being done with IR spectrometers in some lab instruments,
but no one had ever tried it with harmonic radio waves broadcast into the earth.
The major obstacle to lab testing with radio waves turned out to be the
signal to noise ratio. What inspired me to begin developing this technology in the
summer of 1993 was a phenomenon that occurred while surveying a known oil field
for a new well site. My team and I were using twenty-five watt marine radios with half
wave whip antennae. Normally these radios will reach out ten to fifteen miles without
any trouble. We were within eyesight of each other, say a quarter of a mile apart, and
could not communicate across the oil field. There was a magnetic fissure caused by a
quake or mild plate shift in the petroliferous structure beneath us. The radio signal was
virtually shunted into the ground which silenced the six meter marine radios. The
apparent signal to noise ratio was very high under these conditions. These subtle
magnetic shifts are what dowsers detect with forked sticks or metal rods held loosely
by hand.
I decided right away to quantify the drop in radio frequency (RF) power. I had
a pair of old Yaesu HAM base units that were capable of broadcasting a constant two
meter wave. The broadcasting unit was about five watts sent through a quarter wave
four-element square wave antenna pointed straight into the ground; exactly zero
degrees. The receiving unit was moved at least as far away as the petroliferous