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Old 07-30-2006, 08:04 AM  
juz
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Join Date: May 2006
Location: Van down by the river
Posts: 307
Quote:
Originally Posted by ThunderBalls
Even more telling is the loud thunderous explosions. Notice in the beginning there is a dust cloud at the bottom of the building, approximately 30 seconds later you hear some sort of explosion. Then as the building is falling you hear an even louder explosion. Since that video was taken from at least a mile away and the fact that sound does not travel as fast as light tells me that the first explosion caused the cloud of dust and the second explosion happened just before the building fell and was the cause of it falling.

And what the hell is with that helicopter hovering over the building for over half a minute and as its leaving the building falls?

To the people that think explosives did not bring the towers down whats your explanation of the explosive sounds?

Once each tower began to collapse, the weight of all the floors above the collapsed zone bore down with pulverizing force on the highest intact floor. Unable to absorb the massive energy, that floor would fail, transmitting the forces to the floor below, allowing the collapse to progress downward through the building in a chain reaction. Engineers call the process "pancaking," and it does not require an explosion to begin, according to David Biggs, a structural engineer at Ryan-Biggs Associates and a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) team that worked on the FEMA report.

Like all office buildings, the WTC towers contained a huge volume of air. As they pancaked, all that air--along with the concrete and other debris pulverized by the force of the collapse--was ejected with enormous energy. "When you have a significant portion of a floor collapsing, it's going to shoot air and concrete dust out the window." NIST lead investigator Shyam Sunder tells PM. Those clouds of dust may create the impression of a controlled demolition, Sunder adds, "but it is the floor pancaking that leads to that perception."

Demolition expert Romero regrets that his comments to the Albuquerque Journal became fodder for conspiracy theorists. "I was misquoted in saying that I thought it was explosives that brought down the building," he tells PM. "I only said that that's what it looked like."

Romero, who agrees with the scientific conclusion that fire triggered the collapses, demanded a retraction from the Journal. It was printed Sept. 22, 2001. "I felt like my scientific reputation was on the line." But emperors-clothes.com saw something else: "The paymaster of Romero's research institute is the Pentagon. Directly or indirectly, pressure was brought to bear, forcing Romero to retract his original statement." Romero responds: "Conspiracy theorists came out saying that the government got to me. That is the farthest thing from the truth. This has been an albatross around my neck for three years."


http://www.popularmechanics.com/scie...tml?page=4&c=y
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