Further Evidence of Coal Fly Ash Utilization in Tropospheric Geoengineering: Implications on Human and Environmental Health

J. Marvin Herndon *

Transdyne Corporation, 11044 Red Rock Drive, San Diego, CA 92131, USA

Mark Whiteside

Florida Department of Health in Monroe County, 1100 Simonton Street, Key West, FL 33040, USA

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

We disclose a fourth independent line of evidence, based on the co-precipitation technique, pointing to coal fly ash as the material utilized in tropospheric geoengineering, and describe some of the adverse environmental and public health risks associated with its persistent application. During a snow storm, the fluffy snow traps geoengineering-aerosol-particulates and brings them down with the snow. The results of the ICP-MS analytical measurements of the snow-melt particulates we tested are consistent with three independent lines of evidence that coal fly ash is the main aerosolized particulate used for tropospheric geoengineering. Coal fly ash tropospheric geoengineering inhibits rainfall to change weather/climate which disrupts habitats, including arable habitats. Long periods of artificially induced drought can wreak economic disaster on farmers, and shift the delicate balance in nature, weakening natural defenses and giving a boost to aggressive pathogens. Coal fly ash when exposed to water or body fluids can release a host of toxic chemicals including neuro-toxic aluminum in a chemically mobile form and carcinogens such as arsenic, hexavalent chromium, and the radioactive elements, uranium, thorium and their daughter products. The only safe geoengineering is no geoengineering at all.

 

Keywords: Aerosols, tropospheric spraying, weather modification, climate modification, climate change, coal fly ash, geoengineering, particulate pollution


How to Cite

Marvin Herndon, J., & Whiteside, M. (2017). Further Evidence of Coal Fly Ash Utilization in Tropospheric Geoengineering: Implications on Human and Environmental Health. Journal of Geography, Environment and Earth Science International, 9(1), 1–8. https://doi.org/10.9734/JGEESI/2017/31417

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