Edmondsham Land (@edmondshamland) 's Twitter Profile
Edmondsham Land

@edmondshamland

Book published "Antiquarian Guide" 9781899499960 the Ancient Code for Stonehenge A 22/16, Atlantis 137/0.317=432.1..Earth freq. 081 hertz plasma.land

ID: 1329853840288600067

linkhttp://www.edmondsham.land calendar_today20-11-2020 18:27:46

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Edmondsham Land (@edmondshamland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

3000 BC to 500 CA horizontal lengths of 137 meter high GP Giza were built - see how 173 and 137 interchange between Alpha and Omega values....

3000 BC to 500 CA horizontal lengths of 137 meter high GP Giza were built - see how 173 and 137 interchange between Alpha and Omega values....
Cliff Pickover (@pickover) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Mathematics. Circular prime. Rotate the numbers, and prime numbers reappear. My favorite circular prime is 197. From Ganesh UOR, @ganeshuor, Jaipur, Rajasthan, India. Used with permission.

Mathematics.

Circular prime.  Rotate the numbers, and prime numbers reappear.  My favorite circular prime is 197.

From Ganesh UOR, @ganeshuor, Jaipur, Rajasthan, India. Used with permission.
Edmondsham Land (@edmondshamland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Despite 20% extra yield - a lot! Electroculture stopped in UKGB for no good reason - this was only overhead electric cables - should have tried sun and telluric EM on energy lines "track lines" in dowsing - 137 meters zinc iron cable underground

Despite 20% extra yield - a lot! Electroculture stopped in UKGB for no good reason - this was only overhead electric cables - should have tried sun and telluric EM on energy lines "track lines" in dowsing - 137 meters zinc iron cable underground
Chairman Wild Trout Trust (@chairman_wtt) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Do you know anyone who can donate a prize for the The Wild Trout Trust Spring Auction? Please help us, help our wild brown trout and the wild places they live. Please email [email protected] by January 19th. 🙏🙏🙏

The Principia (@theprincipiaa) 's Twitter Profile Photo

One of the oldest mathematical questions, pondered for millennia, is the Honeycomb Conjecture: how to divide space into equal areas using the least amount of boundary, which bees intuitively solve with hexagons. This fundamental question asks for the most efficient way to pack

Beaver Trust (@beavertrust) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A big year for beavers 🦫 From supporting the first wild beaver release in England to expanding our education programme. These steps bring us closer to restoring Britain's beaver population. Thank you to all our supporters, we couldn’t do this without you

Ganesh UOR (@ganeshuor) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Inserting 48 in mid👇 43 is prime 4483 is prime 444883 is prime 4444488883 is prime 444444488888883 is prime 4444444444444488888888888883 is prime 4444444444444444444444488888888888888888888883 is prime 44444444444444444444444444444888888888888888888888888883 is

Ganesh UOR (@ganeshuor) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In 1999, G. L. Honaker Jr. compiled a list of palindromic primes arranged as a pyramid. It is unique because each new palindromic prime is formed by adding the same two digits to the beginning and end of the previous one.

In 1999, G. L. Honaker Jr. compiled a list of palindromic primes arranged as a pyramid. It is unique because each new palindromic prime is formed by adding the same two digits to the beginning and end of the previous one.
Beaver Trust (@beavertrust) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Beavers are back at Mapperton Estate! After a short stay at Flamingo Land, Chip and Willow were released just in time for Christmas. To find out more about Chip and Willow’s release, watch Mapperton’s full video👇 youtube.com/watch?v=dyUBww…

Ganesh UOR (@ganeshuor) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This simple equation has exposed major financial fraud. If you check the first digit of numbers in real-world data, like bank transactions, you’d expect digits 1 through 9 to appear equally. But they don’t. By Benford's law, smaller digits appear more often, and 1 shows up

This simple equation has exposed major financial fraud.

If you check the first digit of numbers in real-world data, like bank transactions, you’d expect digits 1 through 9 to appear equally. 

But they don’t. By Benford's law, smaller digits appear more often, and 1 shows up