Hudson Bay is Area of Lower than Average Gravity

Kryon book 2 mentioned several hints on gravity manipulation. Saying that the density (mass per volume) of an object is not static as we usually see it. Normally, to change density we change volume. It is an assumption that the mass of an object can not be manipulated. However, if we could change the mass and leave the volume we would have “anti gravity”.

Anyway, he/it also mentioned that there are several points around the world where gravity is not constant and can wreak havoc on propulsions systems designed to manipulate it. I came across one such area in Canada and it’s listed on Wikipedia. No one knows why gravity is lower there than elsewhere.

When Earth’s gravitational field was mapped starting in the 1960s a large region of below-average gravity was detected in the Hudson Bay region. This was initially thought to be a result of the crust still being depressed from the weight of the Laurentide ice sheet during the most recent Ice Age, but more detailed observations taken by the GRACE satellite suggest that this effect cannot account for the entirety of the gravitational anomaly. It is thought that convection in the underlying mantle may be contributing.[3]

Supposedly there are large deposits of iron ore under the bay which affect magnetic fields and compasses.[citation needed]
Hudson Bay Area

One Response to “Hudson Bay is Area of Lower than Average Gravity”

  1. suzie says:

    Hey I don’t know if this has anything to do with gravity, but in southeren Oregon there’s a place called the Oregon Vortex. It where your sense of science is put to challenge. What ever you think is, will be opposite or completely something else. I’ve heard that if you are short, you become taller and vice versa. A turned off car left in neutral, will roll uphill instead of downhill. I haven’t been there, but it’s on my list of things to do, on a future camping trip in that area.

    Laters!

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.