Topic: study of the Venus flytrap
mightymoe's photo
Fri 01/22/16 02:16 PM
Edited by mightymoe on Fri 01/22/16 02:18 PM
Venus’ flytraps (Dionaea muscipula) are found as native plants in the amazing and mysteries Carolina Bays and their surrounding area in the USA.

Did the Venus’s flytraps nearly instantly ‘evolve’ due to the events that were the origin of the Carolina Bays?

Specific life forms created by specific areas energy and Electric Universe events but not Evolution theory, for example the stunningWallace Line.



Much to everyone’s amazement, Venus’ flytraps are not some strange, exotic plant. It is native only to the Carolinas, and, according to Wikipedia, probably within a 60-mile radius of Wilmington, North Carolina. They are found mostly around crater-like formations known as Carolina Bays, which are located mostly in the same area. Connections to these bays, which are thought to be caused by meteors, or the Saginaw Impact

Carnivorous plants are generally herbs, and their traps primary growth. They generally do not form readily fossilizable structures such as thick bark or wood. As a result, there is no fossil evidence of the steps that would link Dionaea and Aldrovanda, or with their common ancestor with Drosera. Nevertheless, it is possible to extrapolate an evolutionary history based on phylogenetic studies of both genera. Researchers have proposed a series of steps that would ultimately result in the complex snap-trap mechanism.
Once the insect is digested, the cells on the upper surface of the midrib will grow, much more slowly, and the leaf will re-open. As you might imagine, the leaf cannot keep doing this rapid growth trick forever. That is why it is only able to close its trap about seven times during the life of a leaf … The Venus Flytrap also reproduces via its rhizome. It never has more than seven leaves.

The origin and formation of Carolina Bays look to be some form of Electric Universe geology. Planet Earth interacting and electrically discharging with another electrically charged body with some form of Spark Erosion (Electric Discharge Machining) creating the craters.

One possible idea is that it could have been a smaller space body in the asteroid family (bollide, meteorite, comet).

Another is that it could have been during a interactive event with a wandering planet like Venus, Mars etc as suggested by Immanuel Velikovsky in his Words in Collision, or, by most variants of our solar system formation (cosmogony) based on an Electric Universe theory (EU theory)

http://www.everythingselectric.com/venus-flytraps/

soufiehere's photo
Fri 01/22/16 02:28 PM
Most interesting, thanks :-)

I had no idea they were indigenous to the Carolinas..
that alone makes them worth studying..all those
waterways about, you might think it would find a
way to travel further.

Cool theories.

metalwing's photo
Fri 01/22/16 08:21 PM
I would think that the genetics could be traced in the same way they can trace humans or other species. Maybe the genome has not been fully analyzed yet?

mightymoe's photo
Sat 01/23/16 02:15 PM

I would think that the genetics could be traced in the same way they can trace humans or other species. Maybe the genome has not been fully analyzed yet?


maybe no one has done much of plant life, since it is still somewhat new...