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Post by Admin on May 22, 2015 15:30:58 GMT
Here is one experiment you can do to show others that the earth is flat. Go to where there is a distant view of the horizon – it could be a large piece of flat land or a beach (which is best). Take two saw horses, a piece of lumber about 6-8 feet long, a carpenter's level. Put the board on the saw horses (A-frame), level it and line it up with the sea horizon. When viewed you will see that there is NO curve to the horizon – which there should be if earth is a globe.
How do critics explain that?!
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Post by Admin on May 23, 2015 9:21:47 GMT
Simple Experiment You Can Do This is a continuing series of experiments you can do to show if the earth is flat or round. If you are already convinced, you can do these experiments for others. This is the best way to show others about the lies they have been told. You don't have to be a mathematician or an astronomer to do them. And, you don't need a lot of money. Of course, there are other experiments you can do that would cost a lot of money plus a lot of time. But for now, let's keep it simple. We know that water is level – water seeks its own level. With that in mind, have someone out in a boat at 6 miles distance. You will still have a straight line of sight (you might need an inexpensive telescope to see the boat). If the earth is round, and with a circumvented of 25,000 miles, you should not be able to see that boat because of the curvature of the earth. See illustration below...
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Post by Admin on May 23, 2015 9:23:17 GMT
A real simple experiment
Go to the beach, look at the horizon. Now line the horizon up with the edge of a card from a regular deck of playing cards. If the earth is round, there should be a drop off along the horizon, but it's not. The reason is, that the earth is flat – just as it looks.
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Post by Admin on May 23, 2015 9:33:57 GMT
Distance from Island to Island The distance across the Irish Sea between Douglas Harbour, in the Isle of Man, and the Great Orm's Head in North Wales is 60 miles. If the earth is a globe, the surface of the water would form an arc 60 miles in length, the centre of which would be 1,944 feet higher than the coast line at either end, so that an observer would be obliged to attain this altitude before he could see Welsh coast from the Isle of Man. It is well known, however, that from an altitude not exceeding 100 feet the Great Orm's Head is visible in clear weather from Douglas Harbour. The altitude of 100 feet could cause the line of sight to touch the horizon at the distance of nearly 13 miles; and from the horizon to Orm's Head being 47 miles, the square of this number multiplied by 8 inches gives 1,472 feet as the distance which the Welsh coast line would be below the line of sight, being 600 feet high, its summit would be 872 feet below the horizon. If you live in any other part of the world, go to where there is a beach and an island off shore and look at it. You'll see the base line of the island level and you'll see the ocean on either side level as well.
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