tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2876601164662390448.post8266338247311584000..comments2024-03-28T14:16:03.752-07:00Comments on DECODINGHINDUISM.COM: ATOMIC BOMB IN MAHABHARAT AND HARRAPA EVIDENCE.Pradeep Singh http://www.blogger.com/profile/09792755250562479741noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2876601164662390448.post-69793940584111795712023-05-30T00:48:01.469-07:002023-05-30T00:48:01.469-07:00The walls of Mohen jo daro would have been destroy...The walls of Mohen jo daro would have been destroyed in the event that there had really been an atomic blast. Yes, the Brahma-astra can best be compared to modern nuclear missiles but in all likelyhood, Mohenjo daro suffered from intense flooding and then dramatic climate change, leading to drought leaving the region uninhabitable and soil untillable. <br />I am not here to detract from your basic premise that there was much advanced knowledge in ancient Bharat. No doubt our scientists are going through or ancient scriptures and texts texts with an eagle eye. I believe that to a great extent there was knowledge of the properties of physics, light, lasers for warfare. I do think yes that it was not such a technologically advanced society as we presently live in though and the common man did not partake of any inventions from this knowledge such as vimanas. <br />The passage you quoted in this form, is actually from the popular German author Erik von Däniken and he doesn’t use much citation but did mention the Drona Parva, book 7 of the epic, which has 203 chapters according to a research journalist, Jason Colavito in the US. <br />The Mahabharata contains approximately 1.8 million words, and Mr Colavito found the text in question at 7.202: using the standard English translation of the Mahabharata, done by Kisari Mohan Ganguli between 1883 and 1896. <br />It is important to note that it ahs been seen that von Däniken left out large chunks of the passage without informing of the omission, and he seemed to have changed the order of sentences for dramatic effect. The passages where the sentences are taken from are very apart in the original and von Däniken pu them together to read like an eye witness account of a nuclear blast. <br />Arjuna had astras on the Pandava side and Karna on the Kaurava side. The astra missiles were powered by a holy incantation and they had obtained these astras after great penance and austerities. Perhaps we need to practice more of that before we can access such knowledge. <br /><br />Another thing is that background radiation across the world can vary a great deal. For example, the Ramsar region of Iran has background radiation 80 times over normal. Also nuclear weapons do not leave "radioactive ash" for 8000+ years, because if they did, Hiroshima would not look like it does now.<br /><br />A BARC study found that radaition levels in Kollam district, Kerala were much higher than expected at 9,562 nGy/hr, which is about three times more than the assumed levels. ( nGy/h is nanograys per hour; the standard unit of radiation dose rate used in environmental monitoring.)<br />The higher radiation levels in Kollam district, Kerala are due to the presence of monazite sands that are high in thorium, a component used in nuclear fuel production in India. <br />Southern India, including Kerala, has higher levels of radiation due to the presence of granite and basaltic volcanic rock that contain uranium deposits.<br />(Happily despite the higher levels in Kollam, there have not been any significant findings of increased cancer rates or mortality, suggesting that these radiation levels may not be harmful to human health.)<br /><br />1. https://www.jasoncolavito.com/blog/tracking-down-the-mahabharata-nuclear-bomb-passage-from-chariots-of-the-gods <br />2. https://irna.fr/The-radioactive-skeletons-of-Mohenjo-Daro.html <br />3. https://www.indiatimes.com/explainers/news/explained-why-kerala-has-the-highest-background-radiation-levels-in-india-596474.htmlFind out who you are and do it on purposehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01424613554964663840noreply@blogger.com