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Living Antennas
Plants
Trees
Leaf pigments:Molecular antennas
Whole body
Head and brain
Ears and eyes
Human heart
BoneInsect antennas
Neurons and groups
Cilia and flagella
Whiskers
Cells
Hair
Sweat glands
Wing scales
Cell membranes
Tubules and filaments
Mitochondria
Magnetite crystals
Water in spaces
DNA and RNA
Helpful Links
Related Maps:Natural and Unnatural
EMF
It is not a joke nor a scientific curiosity, this strange discovery of Gen. George O. Squire, Chief Signal Officer, that trees --- all trees, of all kinds and all heights, growing anywhere --- are nature's own wireless towers and antenna combined.
RadioBio:DARPA to ResearchNatural Antennas
Phil Callahan (p. 27):Insects and the
Battle of the Beams
Deep sea sponge
Electro-horticulture
Tree Magic
Tree Antennas
Trees as antennas
The "Tree Antenna"
Tree emissions, nearby source
Why the forests are green
Natural antenna complexes
Geometric shape as antenna
Human as ELF receiver
Inside the head of a worm
Head as antenna, brain as receiver
Light harvesting
Bats ears probe space
Human ear as antenna
Chlorosomes, light harvesting
Heart/brain interactions
Microwave, heart, heart rate
Dolphin teeth, mandible morphology
Guide to insect antennas
Amateur entomologists guide
Odor antenna, circadian rhythms
Directional antennae: Ask Nature
Field (ephaptic) coupling
Spinal cord as an antenna
Neuronal tissue as electrical
Magnetic sensor, worm neuron
Human brain, Schumann resonance
Tuning in to cell's antenna
Light, odor, sound, movement
Making sense of cilia and flagelli
Primary Cilium, cell homeostasis
Primary Cilium as Cell's Antenna
Cat whiskers
THz, biosensor cells
Neuronal audio transmission
Human forearm hair, AC fields
Silver ants control EMF via hair
Bumblebees sense EF via fuzzy hair
Helical antennas for 5G?
YouTube: THz, helical sweat ducts
Butterflies emit UV light
Sensory transduction
Tubulin sensitive to local EM field
Living H2O, the Dancing Rainbow
Biophotons
Magnetoreception in Animals
Living H2O, the Dancing Rainbow
Bacteria on the radio
DNA could act as antenna
Patterns in Nature
Insects and Infrared
Secret EM Life of Plants
Energy Interdependence
Books by Philip Callahan
Radio signals of natural origin
Electrostatic forces in insect world
Arrange solar panels like tree leaves
Nature's Nonlinear Optical Antennas
Similarities, plant antenna, animal proteins
Altered animal behavior when humans block EMF
Magnetite
Cryptochrome
Environment
EMF and Birds
Living Systems
EMF, Trees, Plants
DNA is a Fractal Antenna
Marine and Freshwater Life
LIVING ANTENNAS:
Photosensitive moleculesNucleic acids, proteins
Interfacial water of living systemsCellular organelles
Single cellsHairs, cilia, trichomes
Sensory organsStructures: head, spine
Heart, nervous system, brainEntire organism, animal, plant
Wasp antenna
DNA, with its ‘coil of coils’ structure, is exquisitely sensitive to electromagnetic fields, including ELF, RF and ionizing radiation. It possesses the two structural characteristics of fractal antennas, electronic conduction and self-symmetry.
Leaf trichomes
Human earPinna
Bat ears
DNA signaling is stimulated by 7 Hz naturally occurring waves on earth.
Antennas, to simplify one definition, transmit by converting electrical currents into electromagnetic waves. They receive by converting electromagnetic waves back into electrical currents. They can function in air, space, under water or other liquid, and even through solid matter for limited distances. Every antenna has specific characteristics that determine the signal’s range and radiation pattern or shape. (Paraphrased from Banner Engineering)
Nature has evolved wonderful antenna systems on many scales, throughout her biodiverse kingdom, from entire organisms down to molecular structures.
This map can only introduce the topic of natural, living antennas. There is so much yet to learn about them, and yet we have jumped ahead of ourselves by developing powerful technologies which may well disrupt them.
DNAFractal antenna?Whiskers
The sun has millions of narrowband radiating emissions in all portions of the spectrum.
My experiments indicate the hairs on the leaves of plants are really dielectric waveguide-antennae for collecting energy in the form of infrared or microwave signals from the Sun.
Home: OscillatoriumNewest version this mapDate of this update: 02-20-18
...water provides the electrons and protons to fuel the photosynthesis-respiration dynamo that spins inanimate molecules into living organisms out of pure sunlight. Water is truly the medium, message and means of life. Feather antennas?
Philip Callahan
Mae-Wan Ho Camilla Rees
L. Montagnier
Tree AntennasPhilip Callahan