Re: Starting Chemical Fires In The Air!
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Re: Starting Chemical Fires In The Air!         

Group: alt.magick · Group Profile
Author: virtualadepts
Date: Mar 12, 2007 14:34

On Mar 12, 5:05 pm, virtualade...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Mar 12, 4:18 pm, virtualade...@gmail.com wrote:
>
>
>
>> On Mar 12, 9:42 am, virtualade...@gmail.com wrote:
>
>>> If someone started flying over the air around a city, and no one could
>>> detect them. Let's say they kept flying around the sun, where no one
>>> was looking. Then lets say they started seeding the air with oil, and
>>> chemicals. So that the chemicals were to persist in the environment,
>>> and freely contain themselves in the air. Then they would just need
>>> to drop a bomb hot enough to spark the chemical fire and ignite the
>>> air. I've read that once air gets hots enough it turns to plasma
>>> anyway, and you can actually start chemical fires in the air using
>>> nuclear physics.
>
>>> What would you call a bomb like that?
>
>> Live: Fire Fueled by Gas Well Explosion in Texas
>> Last Edited: Monday, 12 Mar 2007, 1:59 PM MDT
>> Created: Monday, 12 Mar 2007, 1:59 PM MDT
>> Credit: MyFox
>
>> Fire has been burning for about 45 minutes.
>
> Huge Gas Line Explosion Knocks Out Power to 30,000 People in Texas
>
> Monday , March 12, 2007
>
> FC1
> ADVERTISEMENT
>
> About 30,000 people reportedly lost power Monday after a massive gas
> line explosion in Parker County, Texas.
>
> Flames have engulfed 10 pieces of equipment and several cars. Early
> reports say the flames could be seen from miles away. The flames
> appeared to be fed from a gas line.
>
> Bob Hopkins, the public information officer for the Weatherford,
> Texas, Fire Department, told FOX News shortly after 4 p.m. that the
> explosion took place after a high-pressure line operated by Chevron
> ruptured.
>
> "We can tell at this point the men were working on the line, it's
> apparent by the backhoes around it, but we don't know what caused it,"
> Hopkins said, adding that officials are not yet sure if there are any
> injuries resulting from the blast.
>
> Parker County authorities rushed to the scene, as flames rolled
> several hundred feet into the air from a line in a rural area north of
> Weatherford.
>
> The area where the fire is raging is located about 30 miles west of
> Fort Worth.

It's called a fuel air explosive:
http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/sys/dumb/fae.htm
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