Living Antennas Plants Trees Leaf pigments: Molecular antennas Whole body Head and brain Ears and eyes Human heart Bone Insect 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. R adioBio: D ARP A t o R esear c h N atur al Ant ennas Phil Callahan (p. 27): Insects and t he Battle of t he Beams Deep sea sponge Electro-horticulture T ree Magic T ree Antennas T rees as antennas The "T ree Antenna" T ree 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 T uning 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? Y ouT ube: THz, helical sweat ducts Butterflies emit UV light Sensory transduction T ubulin 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 , T rees, Plants DNA is a Fractal Antenna Marine and Freshwater Life LIVING ANTENNAS: Photosensitive molecules Nucleic acids, proteins Interfacial water of living systems Cellular organelles Single cells Hairs, cilia, trichomes Sensory organs Structures: head, spine Heart, nervous system, brain Entire 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 ear Pinna 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. DNA Fractal 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: Oscillatorium Newest version this map Date 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-W an Ho Camilla Rees L. Montagnier T ree Antennas Philip Callahan