Wednesday, September 20, 2017

Aug 21st Smith's Ferry Idaho ECLIPSE moment of totality


I took this picture using 400 ASA color film (pushed to 1600), with my 30-year old Nikon FG20 SLR, using a 200MM lens, F8 aperture, opening the shutter manually for 4 seconds, at the moment of totality. I'd removed the solar filter just prior.

















The shifting moon appears truncated in front of the sun, perhaps because of the 4-second shutter opening? What is that orb below the sun(part of the Planet X/ Nibiru binary-brown-star system)? 80% of the stars in the Universe have a binary twin star, why not us? In our case, it has an elliptical orbit of perhaps 3,600 years which has affected earth's polar shifts, the great flood and more. Looks like a meteor brushing to the left.

Here are more pictures (below) taken up to the point of totality, with the solar filter:

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