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Better Mouse Traps
EFL from a longer piece concerning Korea by Ralph Kinney Bennett.

Military forensic geologists have been poring over maps of North Korea (the best ones, incidentally, were made by the Japanese back in 1904-5 during the Russo-Japanese War) to look for geological weak points and anomalies. They study multiple radar images to get even more precise pictures of the topography. Is it possible, for instance, to discover fissures in seemingly solid rock, or badly weathered rock formations that might be entry points for earth-penetrating bombs?

Another resource that may be employed is HAARP, the High-Frequency Active Auroral Research Project, located in Alaska. HAARP employs 72 huge antennae to send signals that heat the ionosphere, thus creating a "mirror." Extremely long frequency (ELF) and very long frequency (VLF) radio waves are bounced off this temporary mirror to penetrate the earth. Anomalies in the return signals can be processed to "paint" images of underground cavities, including the geometric patterns of man-made tunnels and facilities.

HAARP data can be used to direct more focused satellite and spy plane photography and help pinpoint camouflaged or hidden tunnel entrances for future targeting. It may even help precisely target the exact point in an underground complex at which an earth-penetrating warhead should enter.

Hopefully tunnel busting will now be easier. We are near to closing the mine shaft gap.
Posted by: Super Hose 2003-10-27
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=20411