{"id":238,"date":"2018-08-26T01:30:00","date_gmt":"2018-08-26T01:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/primarywater.org\/?p=238"},"modified":"2018-08-26T01:30:00","modified_gmt":"2018-08-26T01:30:00","slug":"new-primary-water-atmospheric-water-cycle-poster-and-interview","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/primarywater.org\/?p=238","title":{"rendered":"New Primary Water Atmospheric Water Cycle Poster and Interview"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><a href=\"https:\/\/primarywater.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/08\/PWI_poster_rev7-29-18.pdf\">PWI_poster_rev7-29-18<\/a><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/primarywater.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/08\/PWI_Interview.pdf\">PWI_Interview<\/a><\/p>\n<p>The Primary Water Institute \u2013 www.primarywaterinstitute.org<br \/>\nINTERVIEW WITH PAL PAUER<br \/>\nI=Interviewer P=Pal Pauer<br \/>\nI: The following dialogue explains in detail the Primary and Secondary<br \/>\nWater Cycles Chart, the copyright illustration shown at the water-cycle tab<br \/>\npage on the website of primarywaterinstitute.org<br \/>\nToday we\u2019re going to explain in detail the illustration you see before you,<br \/>\nwhich shows the primary and secondary water cycles. You\u2019ll see that the<br \/>\nmantle of the earth contains H2O, that primary water is created deep within<br \/>\nthe earth from the synthesis of hydrogen and oxygen under tremendous<br \/>\nThe Primary Water Institute \u2013 www.primarywaterinstitute.org<br \/>\npressure from the earth\u2019s internal heat.<br \/>\nH20 in the form of vapor is forced up through the weakest areas of earth\u2019s<br \/>\ncrust, the rock fissures, and it becomes liquid as it cools. Primary water is<br \/>\nforced upward. Atmospheric secondary water driven by Solar Energy flows<br \/>\ndownward.<br \/>\nI:<br \/>\nLet us examine the illustration starting from the left.<br \/>\nOur consultant today is Pal Pauer, founder of The Primary Water Institute.<br \/>\nPal, the first black line says \u201cNatural PW Spring.\u201d PW stands for \u201cprimary<br \/>\nwater,\u201d the water\u2019s coming up from deep within the earth, so it is primary<br \/>\nwater, correct?<br \/>\nP: Yes, actually these springs are quite common throughout the world. On<br \/>\nthe left drawing they\u2019re on flat ground, but sometimes a primary water<br \/>\nspring manifests on top of a mountain co-mingling with run-off water<br \/>\n(drawing on right), sometimes in a valley, sometimes in the middle of a<br \/>\ndesert, like the Sahara. These desert waters do not come from the sky, we<br \/>\nshould be asking what an \u201coasis\u201d is all about! The water is being forced up<br \/>\nfrom deep below<br \/>\nThe Primary Water Institute \u2013 www.primarywaterinstitute.org<br \/>\nI: Tell us about the black line pointing to a yellow illustration.<br \/>\nP: This is a drilling rig that has been placed by someone trained to locate<br \/>\nprimary water in the fracture, the faulted structure. The caption reads \u201cPW\u2014<br \/>\nwhich stands for Primary Water\u2014Well at a depth of 200 to 800 feet\u201d but the<br \/>\nfact is one could locate primary water at zero feet, or a thousand feet, the<br \/>\ndepth is really unknown.<br \/>\nI: Going to the right, are a couple of rain clouds are obviously producing<br \/>\nwater from the Hydrologic Cycle. Please tell us about the next 4 black lines.<br \/>\nThe Primary Water Institute \u2013 www.primarywaterinstitute.org<br \/>\nP: The first line identifies Permeable surface, pointing to permeable ground,<br \/>\nwhich is comprised of unsorted material which could be crushed gravel,<br \/>\nsands, or soil which has been oxidized on surface from which we grow our<br \/>\nfood. \u201cPermeable\u201d is simply any kind of oxidized surface into which water<br \/>\nfrom the secondary cycle, water or snow melt, can and does penetrate. It\u2019s<br \/>\npart of the secondary cycle\u2014water can evaporate from or permeate into it \u2014<br \/>\nin short, it\u2019s not concrete or solid rock.<br \/>\nI: Why is the underground stream coming from rain runoff from the<br \/>\nmountain labeled \u201cPolluted Aquifer\u201d?<br \/>\nP: \u201cPolluted\u201d does not imply malicious or unconscious intent. Any aquifer<br \/>\nThe Primary Water Institute \u2013 www.primarywaterinstitute.org<br \/>\nthat is trapped beneath this permeable material, which we occupy has to be<br \/>\npolluted because of our presence, and the presence of animals. We occupy<br \/>\nthat space. So ANYTHING we throw away, flush, dispose of, will find its<br \/>\nway down to this aquifer. Today pollutants also come from man made<br \/>\ncontaminants into the atmosphere, which also includes radioactivity from<br \/>\nnuclear problems.<br \/>\nI: Tell us about the Reservoir in the illustration.<br \/>\nP: A reservoir is part of the secondary water cycle, even if constructed at a<br \/>\nheight higher than the structures with human occupancy, because a reservoir<br \/>\nreceives its water from rain or runoff.<br \/>\nI: There is a huge push for chemicals to treat our drinking water from the<br \/>\nreservoirs. Water obtained directly from primary water would not need to be<br \/>\ntreated to be safe to drink, is this true?<br \/>\nP: Absolutely.<br \/>\nI: The fourth line called runoff?<br \/>\nP: Runoff flows from the highest point to the lowest point in our<br \/>\nenvironment, and that water joins with the other waters of the secondary<br \/>\nwater cycle.<br \/>\nI: Let\u2019s look at the larger lower white oval entitled \u201cPrimary Water Cycle,\u201d<br \/>\nplease tell us about it.<br \/>\nThe Primary Water Institute \u2013 www.primarywaterinstitute.org<br \/>\nP: We didn\u2019t know exactly what to name the full process so we called it<br \/>\nprimary water cycle. First of all, it refers to water that originates in the<br \/>\nMantle, the water cycle which predates even the existence of an atmosphere.<br \/>\nThe oceans were \u201cmade\u201d and the secondary water cycle came about<br \/>\nthereafter from evaporation. We have evidence that the level of the ocean is<br \/>\nnot the same as it was 5 to 10 thousand years ago; the water in the mantle<br \/>\ncontributes to our \u201cwater planet\u201d being the \u201cwater planet\u201d that it is. The total<br \/>\nvalue of our ocean waters is in fact growing today.<br \/>\nI: Lets look back up to the secondary water cycle. Locate the sun. There is a<br \/>\nsmall lake to the right of the rain cloud on the left.<br \/>\nThe Primary Water Institute \u2013 www.primarywaterinstitute.org<br \/>\nUnderneath it we see an aquifer composed of both runoff water and primary<br \/>\nwater. So some aquifers have both kinds of water?<br \/>\nP: Primary water comes up from the mantle and injects itself\u2014the earth has<br \/>\nfaults, fractures, so surface and primary water commingle in aquifers, in<br \/>\nsome lakes and some places in the ocean. This is shown on the illustration in<br \/>\nthe area directly below the sun.<br \/>\nI: So we have a situation of secondary water from the polluted cycle<br \/>\ncommingling with primary water\u2014an ongoing dilution of the pollution via<br \/>\nthis comingling. In places primary water is constantly and continually<br \/>\nsurfacing.<br \/>\nP: Correct. Except where the primary water fissure don\u2019t surface. Let\u2019s take<br \/>\na look at those.<br \/>\nI: In this illustration we see in each of the two mountains which underneath<br \/>\na large rainclouds that there are primary water fissures which do reach the<br \/>\nsurface.<br \/>\nThe Primary Water Institute \u2013 www.primarywaterinstitute.org<br \/>\nP: That is absolutely correct. You can see two drilling rigs,<br \/>\nshowing that you can access those waters that are trying to surface. The dark<br \/>\nline shows the drill going into the primary water fissure. Today there are<br \/>\ndrilling rigs, which allow us to access a fissure, access these waters that are<br \/>\ntrying to surface, by drilling either vertically or horizontally. The yellow<br \/>\ndrilling rig on the left show a drill, which is indicated by the black line,<br \/>\nentering horizontally, and the yellow rig on the right has a drill\u2014again,<br \/>\nindicated the black line\u2014drilling vertically into a separate fissure. How one<br \/>\nchooses to drill of course depends on the setting and the logistics, can you<br \/>\ndrill horizontally, is there a place to put the rig? In the old days we didn\u2019t<br \/>\nhave rigs that would drill horizontally, we had to tool into the mountain, but<br \/>\nnow there exist such rigs.<br \/>\nI: We are seeing fissures that have never surfaced. Is it \u201cbetter\u201d to allow it to<br \/>\nexit to reduce the force of pressure.<br \/>\nP: It makes no difference. This planet provides for us to use. It makes no<br \/>\ndifference to the planet whether we use it or we don\u2019t use it!<br \/>\nI: Moving right to the Volcanic Eruptions, can you tell us about that?<br \/>\nP: There are simply no volcanic eruptions known, anywhere, without water<br \/>\nvapors which is further proof of the fact that when the unsorted magma<br \/>\nsurfaces in the form of a eruptions, of volcanoes, they bring along with them<br \/>\na yet undistilled, unseparated water in the form of steam. The magma from<br \/>\nbelow brings along a great deal of water, in the form of steam. When it<br \/>\nThe Primary Water Institute \u2013 www.primarywaterinstitute.org<br \/>\ndoesn\u2019t erupt, it can exist simply as hot springs, which also exist all over the<br \/>\nworld.<br \/>\nI: Tell us about the Fault lines filled with Primary Water in the ground the<br \/>\nfar right of the illustration. What should the viewer understand about these?<br \/>\nP: Fault lines also indicate sheer zones are a result of indirect activity down<br \/>\nbelow. There can be vertical or horizontal faults, all of which are a result of<br \/>\nthe indirect activity from down below. The solid material down below is sort<br \/>\nof bouncing around. The direction of the fault depends on which way the<br \/>\npush comes\u2014upwards, downwards, sideways. Earth movement can uncover<br \/>\na primary water fissure\u2014which is exactly what happened recently in Napa<br \/>\nValley after the 6.0 earthquake\u2014or it can disrupt and cut off a prior flow.<br \/>\nPeople have asked whether drilling for primary water in such fault lines, and<br \/>\nthereby releasing the pressure would reduce earthquakes? The answer is that<br \/>\nsuch drilling wouldn\u2019t stop earth movements, because everything down<br \/>\nbelow is under stress. It might mitigate earth movement, so we could have a<br \/>\n2 instead of 7 rated earthquake.<br \/>\nI: Do we have enough potable water for our world?<br \/>\nP: In fact we have more water today than we\u2019ve ever had in the history of<br \/>\nthe planet. The point is that we don\u2019t always have the water in the places we<br \/>\nwould like to have it if we rely only on the secondary water cycle, which is<br \/>\ntotally reliant on that which evaporates. The planet itself has enough potable<br \/>\nwater within it, which could see us through these weather cycles, which we<br \/>\nhave for many unknown reasons. We have a back up system, which is this<br \/>\nplanet.<br \/>\nThe Primary Water Institute \u2013 www.primarywaterinstitute.org<br \/>\nI: Seems as if we have been relying on wrong information about water<br \/>\nscarcity, about where water comes from, in a way analogous to think of our<br \/>\nknowledge as in a period similar to that of flat earth science.<br \/>\nP: I concur 100% percent.<br \/>\nI: Recently in California there have been emergency moratoriums on well<br \/>\ndrilling. For example, in October 2014 the County of Ventura, Calif. put a<br \/>\nmoratorium on all drilling which was reducing the ground water table and<br \/>\nresulting in ocean intrusion. Farmlands abutting the ocean are finding<br \/>\nincreased salinity, such that the land can no longer be farmed because of<br \/>\nhigh salt content.<br \/>\nP: Ventura County should know better. The ancient river basin of Santa<br \/>\nClara Valley River flows into the ocean at Oxnard and Pt. Magu. It is<br \/>\nmade up of both secondary and primary water sources. They refer to the<br \/>\nwater as \u201cour bank account\u201d but they don\u2019t know where their money comes<br \/>\nfrom. It\u2019s a distribution choice. In the past they\u2019ve pumped too much water<br \/>\nfrom that basin and could not maintain the ability of the basin to sustain<br \/>\nitself and keep the salt water out. They could choose to accomplish<br \/>\nreplenishing the water from the California aqueduct, which is to rob Peter to<br \/>\npay Paul.<br \/>\nOr they could choose to have water wells in structures that Ventura County<br \/>\nis well noted for and drill for primary water in, say, the foothills of upper<br \/>\nOjai.<br \/>\nIt\u2019s a question of distribution and of cost. Such wells are independent of the<br \/>\natmosphere, and would be there even in the drought periods.<br \/>\nI: Pal, your Primary &amp; Secondary Water Cycles chart is easy to understand.<br \/>\nWe have simply not been taught. Thank you for your contribution to our<br \/>\nunderstanding.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>PWI_poster_rev7-29-18 PWI_Interview The Primary Water Institute \u2013 www.primarywaterinstitute.org INTERVIEW WITH PAL PAUER I=Interviewer P=Pal Pauer I: The following dialogue explains in detail the Primary and Secondary Water Cycles Chart, the copyright illustration shown at the water-cycle tab page on the website of primarywaterinstitute.org Today we\u2019re going to explain in detail the illustration you see before [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[3],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-238","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-new-posts"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/primarywater.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/238","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/primarywater.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/primarywater.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/primarywater.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/primarywater.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=238"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/primarywater.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/238\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":241,"href":"https:\/\/primarywater.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/238\/revisions\/241"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/primarywater.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=238"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/primarywater.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=238"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/primarywater.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=238"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}