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Jim Marrs - PSI Spies - Amazon S3

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The Enigma Files 245remote chance—no one took the possibility veryseriously—that Jupiter had some kind of ring.To everyone’s amazement, Voyager’s time exposureproduced a streaky image that the scientistscould explain only as a ring of boulder-sized debris.The findings seemed so unlikely that the NASA teamdelayed making the information public for several dayswhile the data were checked and rechecked. Saturnwas long the only planet known to have rings and wasconsidered to be the only one that could have them. In1977, that theory was shattered with the discovery ofrings around the planet Uranus. Jupiter itself was surveyedearlier by the Pioneer 10 and 11 spacecraft, butit is easy to see why no Jovian ring was found. Jupiter’sring is almost paper thin, perhaps 1 km (0.6 miles)high and impossible to view from Earth. 5But not impossible for Ingo Swann to remote view sixyears earlier.Many other Jovian features described by Swann wereconfirmed by the later NASA missions: the high winds, toweringmountain ranges, and thick cloud cover.Scientist Hal Puthoff said he believes that space explorationmay be one of the most important and cost-effectiveapplications of remote viewing.On March 11, 1974, Swann made a mental trip to theplanet Mercury in anticipation of the upcoming Mariner 10flyby. This remote viewing session was monitored byDr. Janet Mitchell. Swann’s comments were recorded, transcribed,notarized, and deposited by noon March 13 with

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