Tuesday, December 26, 2017

Silicate-coated gold lotus

Silicate-coated gold nanoparticles are all the rage in biochem. This is because molten gold, sensitive to particular frequencies, can be kept in a fixed shape by coating it with silicate. The volcanic eruptions on Earth consist of silicate, mainly, which then makes sense. And small amounts of gold and other noble metals. In fact, the only source of noble metals, almost, is volcanic rock mines, which are remnants of volcanoes and contain valuable metallic and mineral treasures, especially gold, that the golden lotus base below the silicate layer spouted during those volcanic eruptions. Hiranyagarbha, the effulgent Lord Brahma, was born in a golden lotus flower. He still lives perched on top of its pericarp, known as mount Meru. The outer petals from the Loka-aloka mountains. This lotus flower opens and closes periodically, and eventually completes its life-cycle, bringing about the end of Brahma's life. All intermediate devastations are simply floods from the garbhodaka waters, which rise and fall to renew the silicate "planets" for hosting life again and again.

So the earth is simply a silicate coating on top of a gold lotus petal of the gold flower that Brahma was born on. 

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