Accidental Time Travelers | The Mystery and Science of Time Slips

Awesome episode, I love that kind of stuff too!

It reminds me of grid points. Ley lines are a fascinating topic.

The only thing that didn't feel quite right was the Liverpool subway system. Does a subway system operates and consumes that much power? So much as to equal the level of energy a ley line would have? I'm not sure.
 

The only thing that didn't feel quite right was the Liverpool subway system. Does a subway system operates and consumes that much power? So much as to equal the level of energy a ley line would have? I'm not sure.
A subway moves (heavy) people up and down terrain for a given distance. That does take a lot of energy. Is it enough to override or activate a leyline, who knows? I'm convinced high voltage is the key to various anomalies. Frequencies also seem to come into play. I don't know if Liverpool uses DC or AC on their subway lines. AC would make more sense over longer distances. If the subway car connection to the track isn't perfect (and rarely would be), then it's going to spark and create some kind of pulsed frequency. Both of these are likely needed at the right time to create a slip. With telluric currents, solar flare activity could come into the picture. A large flare would change the Earth's magnetic field shape. With a changing magnetic field comes electrical currents.

As AJ mentioned, a lot of these stories seem to be made up, but I seriously doubt all of them are made up. What I described in the previous paragraph could become a simple Tesla system under the right circumstances. That might explain the larger number of time slips for that city.

What would be interesting would be to go to Liverpool with 2 high frequency and high voltage generators. Plug one into the ground for the telluric aspects, and hook the other up to an antenna to generate an electrostatic field around everyone. This experiment may not become interesting if it works and really does trap people in the past. Big "oops" moment.
 

This episode was fascinating, I liked the physical analysis of the different events, since I discovered HDR and key lines, I also read somewhere in France that nearby a roundabout some people find a vortex and experiment some time split.
 

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