Our navigation bar is loading . . .

 


 

Jesus Christ Saves Ministries

Helping San Diego, California and beyond since 1997.  




 

JCSM's Top 1000 Christian Sites - Free Traffic Sharing Service!


Do you need volunteer, community service, work, military or court hours?

Click here and add this page to your favorites!

Return to the JCSM Study Center!

Encyclopedia Britannica



EARTH CURRENTS

This article appears in Volume V08, Page 817 of the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: DRO-ECG
EARTH CURRENTS . After the invention of telegraphy it was soon found that telegraph lines in which the circuit is completed by the earth are traversed by natural electric currents
which occasionally interfere seriously with their use, and which are known as " earth currents."
1. Amongst the pioneers in investigating the subject were several English telegraphists, e.g. W. H. Barlow (1) and C. V. Walker (2), who were in charge respectively of the Midland and South-Eastern telegraph systems. Barlow noticed the existence of a more or less regular diurnal variation, and the resultconfirmed by all subsequent investigatorsthat earth currents proper occur in a line only when both ends are earthed. Walker, as the result of general instructions issued to telegraph clerks, collected numerous statistics as to the phenomena during times of large earth currents. His results and those given by Barlow both indicate that the lines to suffer most from earth currents in England have the general direction N.E. to S.W. As Walker points out, it is the direction of the terminal plates relative to one another that is the essential thing. At the same time he noticed that whilst at any given instant the currents in parallel lines have with rare exceptions the same direction, some lines show normally stronger currents than others, and he suggested that differences in the geological structure of the intervening
ground might be of importance. This is a point which seems still somewhat obscure.
Our present knowledge of the subject owes much to practical men, but even in the early days of telegraphy the fact that telegraph systems are commercial undertakings, and cannot allow
h T. Albrecht, Resultate des internat. Breitendienstes, i. and ii. (Berlin, 1903 and 1906); F. Klein and A. Sommerfeld, Uber die Theorie des Kreisels, iii. p. 672; R. Spitaler, " Die periodischen Luftmassenverschiebungen and ihr Einfluss auf die Lagenanderung der Erdaxe " (Petermanns Mitteilungen, Erganzungsheft, 137) ; S. New-comb, " Statement of the Theoretical Laws of the Polar Motion " (Astronomical Journal, 1898, xix. 158) ; F. R. Helmert, " Zur Erklarung der beobachteten Breitenanderungen " (Asir. Nachr. No. 3014) ; J. Weeder, " The 14-monthly period of the motion of the Pole from determinations of the azimuth of the meridian marks of the Leiden observatory" (Kon. Ak. van Wetenschappen to Amster-dam, 1900) ; A. Sokolof, " Determination du mouvement du pole terr. au moyen des mires meridiennes de Poulkovo " (Mel. math. et astr. vii., 1894); J. Bonsdorff, " Beobachtungen von 3 Cassiopejae mit dem grossen Zenitteleskop " (Mitteilungen der Nikolai-Hauptsternwarte zu Pulkowo, 1907) ; J. Larmor and E. H. Hills, " The irregular
movement
  of the Earth's axis of rotation : a contribution towards the analysis of its causes " (Monthly Notices R.A.S., 1906, l(vii. 22) ; A. S. Cristie, " The
latitude
  variation Tide " (Phil. Soc. of.Wash., 1895, Bull. xiii, 103) ; H. G. van de Sande Bakhuysen, "Uber die Anderung der Polhohe " (Asir. Nachr. No. 3261) ; A. V. Backlund, " Zur Frage nach der Bewegung des Erdpoles " (Asir. Nachr. No. 3787) ; R. Schumann, Uber die Polhi henschwankung " (Asir. Nachr. No. 3873) ; ' Numerische Untersuchung " (Erganzungshefte zu den Astr. Nachr. No. 11); Weitere Untersuchungen (No. 4142) ; Bull. astr., 1900, June, report of different theoretical memoirs. ,
the public to wait the convenience of science, was a serious obstacle to their employment for research. Thus Walker feelingly says, when regretting his paucity of data during a notable earth current disturbance : " Our clerks were at their wits' end to clear off the telegrams. . . At a time when observations would have been very highly acceptable they were too much occupied with their ordinary duties." Some valuable observations have, however, been made on long telegraph lines where special facilities have been given.
Amongst these may be mentioned the observations on French lines in 1883 described by E. E. Blavier (3), and those on two German lines Berlin-Thorn and Berlin-Dresden during 1884 to 1888 discussed by B. Weinstein (4).
2. Of the experimental lines specially constructed perhaps the best known are the Greenwich lines instituted by Sir G. B. Airy (5), the lines at Pawlowsk due to H. Wild (6), and those at Parc Saint Maur, near Paris (7).
Experimental Lines.At Greenwich observations were commenced in 1865, but there have been serious disturbances due to artificial currents from electric railways for many years. There are two lines, one to
Dartford
  distant about 10 m., in a direction somewhat south of east, the other to Croydon distant about 8 m., in a direction west of south.
Information from a single line is incomplete, and unless this is clearly understood erroneous ideas may be derived. The times at which the current is largest and least, or when it vanishes, in an east-west line, tell nothing directly as to the amplitude at the time of the resultant current. The lines laid down at Pawlowsk in 1883 lay nearly in and perpendicular to the geographical meridian, a distinct desideratum, but were only about 1 km. long. The installation at Parc Saint Maur, discussed by T. Moureaux, calls for fuller description. There are three lines, one having terminal earth plates 14.8 km. apart in the geographical meridian, a second having its earth plates due east and west of one another, also 14.8 km. apart, and the third forming a closed circuit wholly insulated from the ground. In each of the three lines is a Deprez d'Arsonval galvanometer. Light reflected from the galvanometer mirrors falls on photographic paper wound round a drum turned by clockwork, and a continuous record is thus obtained.
3. Each galvanometer has a resistance of about 200 ohms, but is shunted by a resistance of only 2 ohms. The total effective resistances in the N.-S. and E.-W. lines are 225 and 348 ohms respectively. If i is the current recorded, L, g and s the resistances of the line, galvanometer and shunt respectively, then E, the difference of potential between the two earth plates, is given by
E=i(1+g/s) {L+gs/(g+s)}.
To' calibrate the record, a Daniell cell is put in a circuit including l000 ohms and the three galvanometers as shunted. If i' be the current recorded, e the E.M.F. of the cell, then e =a (1+g/s) { t000+3gs/(g+s) }. Under the conditions at Parc Saint Maur we may write 2 for gs/(g + s), and 1.072 for e, and thence we have approximately E=o.24o(i/i') for the N.-S. line, and E=0.371(i/i') for the E.-W. line.
The method of standardization assumes a potential difference between earth plates which varies slowly enough to produce a practically steady current. There are several causes producing currents in a telegraph wire which do not satisfy this limitation. During thunderstorms surgings may arise, at least in overhead wires, without these being actually struck. Again, if the circuit includes a variable magnetic field, electric currents will be produced independently of any direct source of potential difference. In the third circuit at Parc Saint Maur, where no earth plates exist, the current must be mainly due to changes in the earth's vertical magnetic field, with superposed disturbances due to atmospheric electricity or aerial waves. Even in the other circuits, magnetic and atmospheric influences play some part, and when their contribution is important, the galvanometer deflection has an uncertain value. What a galvanometer records when traversed by a suddenly varying current depends on other things than its mere resistance.
Even when the current is fairly steady, its exact significance is not easily stated. In the first place there is usually an appreciable E.M.F. between a plate and the earth in contact with it, and this E.M.F. may vary with the temperature and the dryness of the soil. Naturally one employs similar plates buried to the same depth at the two ends, but absolute identity and invariability of conditions can hardly be secured. In some cases, in short lines (8), there is reason to fear that plate E.M.F.'s have been responsible for a good deal that has been ascribed to true earth currents. With deep earth plates, in dry ground, this source of uncertainty can, however, enter but little into the diurnal inequality.
4. Another difficulty is the question of the resistance in the earth itself. A given E.M.F. between plates to m. apart may mean very different currents travelling through the earth, according to the chemical constitution and condition of the surface strata.
According to Professor A. Schuster (9), if p and p' be the specific resistances of the material of the wire and of the soil, the current i which would pass along an underground cable formed of actual soil, equal in diameter to the wire connecting the plates, is given by i= i'p/p', where i' is the observed current in the wire. As p' will vary with the depth, and be different at different places along the route, while discontinuities may arise from geological faults, water channels and so on, it is clear that even the most careful observations convey but a general idea as to the absolute intensity of the currents in the earth itself. In Schuster's formula, as in the formulae deduced for Parc Saint Maur, it is regarded as immaterial whether the wire connecting the plates is above or below ground. This view is in accordance with records obtained by Blavier (3) from two lines between Paris and Nancy, the one an air line, the other underground.
5. The earliest quantitative results for the regular diurnal changes in earth currents are probably those deduced by Airy (5) from the records at Greenwich between 1865 and 1867. Airy resolved the observed currents from the two Greenwich lines in and perpendicular to the magnetic meridian (then about 21 to the west of astronomical north). The information given by Airy as. to the precise meaning of the quantities he terms " magnetic tendency " to north and to west is somewhat scanty, but we are unlikely to be much wrong in accepting his figures as proportional to the earth currents from magnetic east to west and from magnetic north to south respectively. Airy gives mean hourly values for each month of the year. The corresponding mean diurnal inequality for the whole year appears in Table I., the unit being arbitrary. In every month the algebraic mean of the 24 hourly values represented a current from north to south in the magnetic meridian, and from east to west in the perpendicular direction; in the same arbitrary units used in Table I. the mean values of these two " constant " currents were respectively 777 and 559
6. Diurnal Variation.Probably the most complete records of diurnal variation are those discussed by Weinstein (4), which depend on several years' records on lines from Berlin to Dresden and to Thorn. Relative to Berlin the geographical co-ordinates of the other two places are:
Thorn . . o 29' N. lat. 5 12' E. long.
Dresden . . 1 28' S. lat. 0 21' E. long.
Thus the Berlin-Dresden line was directed about 82 east of south, and the Berlin-Thorn line somewhat more to the north of east. The latter line had a length about 2.18 times that of the former. The resistances in the two lines were made the same, so if we suppose the difference of potential between earth plates along a given direction to vary as their distance apart, the current observed in the Thorn-Berlin line has to be divided by 2.18 to be comparable with the other. In this way, resolving along and perpendicular to the geographical meridian, Weinstein gives as proportional to the earth currents from east to west and from south to north respectively
J=o147i'+0.4351, and J'=o989i'o too i,
2
where i and i' are the observed currents in the Thorn-Berlin and Dresden-Berlin lines respectively, both being counted positive when flowing towards Berlin.
It. is tacitly assumed that the average earth conductivity is the same between Berlin and Thorn as between Berlin and Dresden. It should also be noticed that local time at Berlin and Thorn differs by fully 20 minutes,while the crests of the diurnal variations in short lines at the two places would probably occur about the same local time. The result is probably a less
sharp
  occurrence of maxima and minima, and a relatively smaller range, than in a short line having the same orientation.
It was found that the average current derived from a number of undisturbed days on either line might be regarded as made up of a " constant part " plus a regular diurnal inequality, the constant part representing the algebraic mean value of the 24 hourly readings. In both lines the constant part showed a decided alteration during the third yearchanging sign in one linein consequence, it is believed, of alterations made in the earth plates. The constant part was regarded as a plate effect, and was omitted from further consideration. Table I. shows in terms of an arbitrary unitwhose relation to that employed for Greenwich data is unknownthe diurnal inequality in the currents along the two lines, and the inequalities thence calculated for ideal lines in and perpendicular to the geographical meridian. Currents are regarded as positive when directed from Berlin to Dresden and from north to south, the opposite point of view to that adopted by Weinstein. The table also shows the mean numerical value of the resultant current (the " constant " part being omitted) for each hour of the day, for the year as a whole, and for winter (November to February), equinox (March, April, September, October) and summer (May to
August). There is a marked double period in both the N.-S. and E.-W. currents. In both cases the numerically largest currents occur from ro A.M. to noon, the directions then being from north to south and from west to east. The currents tend to die out and change sign about 2 P.M., the numerical magnitude then rising again rapidly to 4 or 5 P.M. The current in the meridian is notably the larger. The numerical values assigned to the resultant current are
arithmetic means from the several months composing the season in question.
7. The mean of the 24 hourly numerical values of the resultant current for each month of the year a deducible from Weinstein's datathe unit being the same as beforeare given in Table II.
rchl April May June July Aug. Sep. Oct. Nov. Dec. 93 328 313 314 337 300 258 235 165 132
There is thus a conspicuous minimum at mid-winter, and but little difference between the monthly means from April to August. This is closely analogous to what is seen in the daily range of the magnetic elements in similar latitudes (see MAGNETISM, TERRESTRIAL). There is also considerable resemblance between the curve whose ordinates represent the diurnal inequality in the current passing from north to south, and the curve showing the hourly change in the westerly component of the
horizontal
  magnetic force in similar European latitudes.
8. Relations with Sun-spots, Auroras and Magnetic Storms.Weinstein gives curves representing the mean diurnal inequality for separate years. In both lines the diurnal amplitudes were notably smaller in the later years which were near sun-spot minimum. This raises a presumption that the regular diurnal earth currents, like the ranges of the magnetic elements, follow the 11-year sun-spot period. When we pass to the large and irregular earth currents, which are of practical
interest
  in telegraphy, there is every reason to suppose that the sun-spot period applies. These currents are always accompanied by magnetic disturbances, and when specially striking by brilliant aurora. One most conspicuous example of this occurred in the end of August and beginning of September 1859. The magnetic
disturbances recorded were of almost unexampled size and rapidity, the accompanying aurora was extra-ordinarily brilliant, and E.M.F.'s of 700 and Boo volts are said to have been reached on telegraph lines 500 to 600 km. long. It is doubtful whether. the disturbances of 1859 have been equalled since, but earth current voltages of the order of o.5 volts per mile have been recorded by various authorities, e.g. Sir W. H. Preece (10).
It was the practice for
several years to publish in
the Ann. du bureau central
meteorologique synchronous
magnetic and earth current
curves from Parc Saint Maur
corresponding to the
chief
 
disturbances of the year. In
most cases there is a marked
similarity between the curve
of magnetic declination and
that of the north-south earth
current. At times there is
also a distinct resemblance
between the
horizontal
  force magnetic curve and that of
the east-west earth current, but exceptions to this are not
infrequent. Similar phenomena appear in synchronous
Greenwich records published by Airy in 1868; these show
a close accordance between the horizontal force curves and
those of the currents from magnetic east to west. Originally
it was supposed by Airy that whilst rapid movements in
the declination and north-south current curves sometimes
an. 152
Feb. 2II
Ma
Mean Diurnal Inequalities for the year. Numerical Values of resultant
current.
Greenwich. Thorn-Berlin-Dresden. Thorn-Berlin-Dresden.
North East North East Mean hourly values from
Hour. to to Berlin Thorn to to Year. Winter. I Equinox. Summer.
South West Dresto to South West
den. Berlin.
(Mag.) (Mag.) (Ast.) (Ast.)
-94 -41 -17 -13 -2o to 81 94 51 98
2 -68 -24 -6 -13 -9 II 84 I15 39 97
3 -44 -8 -1 I -1 I 84 I13 31 Io8
4 -18 +9 -20 +15 -17 +17 101 94 58 127
5 3o -1 79 +21 74 +32 122 58 78 23o
6 -63 -33 -139 +5 -136 +26 148 8o 139 225
7 -121 -8o -138 -36 -144 -14 166 155 206 136
8 -175 -123 -7 -98 -28 -92 203 152 185 271
9 -156 -137 +249 -156 +212 -184 305 67 272 575
10 -43 -77 +540 -184 +494 -254 557 232 628 811
II +82 +1 +722 -165 +678 -263 728 411 885 887
Noon +207 +66 +673 -107 +642 -200 675 441 848 735
1 +245 +94 +404 -20 +395 -79 400 284 510 406
2 +205 +113 +35 +55 +46 +47 98 68 Io3 125
3 +153 +97 -261 +99 -237 +132 272 136 355 324
4 +159 +108 -397 +114 -368 +167 404 218 503 492
5 -f 167 +118 -391 +108 -363 +16o 397 206 453 532
6 +125 +95 -311 +96 -287 +137 319 176 333 446
7 +43 +55 -237 +85 -216 +115 247 18o 250 312
8 22 +4 -191 +74 -173 +98 201 207 217 181
9 -115 -49 -168 +59 -153 +81 174 208 194 120
10 -138 - 74 -135 +4o -125 +58 138 155 149 I I I
I I -136 70 84 + 18 79 +29 89 64 95 107
Midnight -147 -8o -43 -2 -43 +4 91 42 119 III
59 56
occurred simultaneously, there was a distinct tendency for the latter to precede the former. More
recent
  examinations of the Greenwich records by W. Ellis (11), and of the Parc St Maur curves by Moureaux, have not confirmed this result, and it is now believed that the two phenomena are practically simultaneous.
There has also been a conflict of views as to the connexion between magnetic and earth current disturbances. Airy's observations tended to suggest that the earth current was the primary cause, and the magnetic disturbance in considerable part at least its effect. Others, on the contrary, have supposed earth currents to be a direct effect of changes in the earth's magnetic field. The prevailing view now is that both the magnetic and the earth current disturbances are due to electric currents in the upper atmosphere, these upper currents becoming visible at times as aurora.
9. There seems some evidence that earth currents can be called into existence by purely local causes, notably difference of level. Thus K. A. Brander (12) has observed a current flowing constantly for a good many days from Airolo (height 116o metres) to the Hospice St Gotthard (height 2094 metres). In an 8-km. line from Resina to the top of Vesuvius L. Palmieri (13)observing in 1889 at three-hour intervals from 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.always found a current running uphill so long as the mountain was quiet. On a long line from Vienna to Graz A. Baumgartner (14) found that the current generally flowed from both ends towards intervening higher ground during the day, but in the opposite directions at night. During a fortnight in September and October 1885 hourly readings were taken of the current in the telegraph cable from Fort-William to Ben Nevis Observatory, and the results were discussed by H. N. Dickson (15), who found a marked preponderance of currents up the line to the summit. The recorded mean data, otherwise regarded, represent a " constant " current, equal to 29 in the arbitrary units employed by Dickson, flowing up the line, together with the following diurnal inequality, + denoting current towards Fort-William (i.e. down the hill, and nearly east to west).
2 3 4 5 6
-41 +13 +23 +55 -3
+18 I +115 +18 +75 --5
There is thus a diurnal inequality, which is by no means very irregular considering the limited number of days, and it bears at least a general resemblance to that shown by Weinstein's figures for an east-west line in Germany. This will serve to illustrate the uncertainties affecting these and analogous observations. A constant current in one direction may arise in whole or part from plate E.M.F.'s; a current showing a diurnal inequality will naturally arise between any two places some distance apart whether they be at different levels or not. Finally, when records are taken only for a short time, doubts must arise as to the generality of the results. During the Ben Nevis observations, for instance, we are told that the summit was almost constantly enveloped in fog or mist. By having three earth plates in the same vertical plane, one at the top of a mountain, the others at opposite sides of it, and then observing the currents between the summit and each of the base stations, as well as directly between the base stationsduring an adequate number of days representative of different seasons of the year and different climatic conditionsmany uncertainties would soon be removed.
io. Artificial Currents.The great extension in the applications of electricity to lighting, traction and power transmission, characteristic of the end of the 19th century, has led to the existence of large artificial earth currents, which exert a disturbing influence on galvanometers and magnetic instruments, and also tend to destroy metal pipes. In the former case, whilst the disturbance is generally loosely assigned to stray or " vagabond " earth currents, this is only partly correct. The currents used for traction are large, and even if there were a perfectly insulated return there would be a considerable resultant magnetic field at distances from the track which were not largely in excess of the distance apart of the direct and return currents(16). At a distance of half a mile or more from an electric tram line the disturbance is usually largest in magnetographs recording the vertical component of the earth's field. The magnets are slightly displaced from the position they would occupy it undisturbed, and are kept in continuous oscillation whilst the trams are running (17). The extent of the oscillation depends on the damping of the magnets.
The distance from an electric tram line where the disturbance
ceases to be felt varies with the system adopted. It also depends
on the length of the line and its subdivision into sections, on
the strength of the currents supplied, the amount of leakage, the
absence or presence of " boosters," and finally on the sensitive-
ness of the magnetic instruments. At the U.S. Coast and
Geodetic Survey's observatory at Cheltenham the effect of the
Washington electric trams has been detected by highly sensitive
magnetographs, though the nearest point of the line is 12 m.
away (18). Amongst the magnetic observatories which have
suffered severely from this cause are those at Toronto, Washing-
ton (Naval Observatory), Kew, Paris (Parc St Maur), Perpignan,
Nice, Lisbon, Vienna, Rome, Bombay (Colaba) and Batavia.
In some cases magnetic observations have been wholly suspended,
in others new observatories have been built on more remote sites.
As regards damage to underground pipes, mainly gas and
water pipes, numerous observations have been made, especially
in Germany and the United States. When electric tramways
have uninsulated returns, and the potential of the rails is allowed
to differ considerably from that of the earth, very considerable
currents are found in neighbouring pipes. Under these condi-
tions, if the joints between contiguous pipes forming a main
present appreciable resistance, whilst the surrounding earth
through moisture or any other cause is a fair conductor, current
passes locally from the pipes to the earth causing electrolytic
corrosion of the pipes. Owing to the diversity of interests
concerned, the extent of the damage thus caused has been very
variously estimated. In some instances it has been so consider-
able as to be the alleged cause of the ultimate failure of water
pipes to stand the pressure they are
I
A.M. P.M.
Hour
-2I +24
8 -32 -9
7 +25
+5o
9
o 12
1- 62 116 +6 exposed to.
- 37 -28 I -34 BIBLIOGRAPHY.See Svante August
Arrhenius, Lehrbuch der kosmischen Physik (
Leipzig
 , 1903), PP. 984-990. For lists of references see J. E. Burbank, Terrestrial Magnetism, vol. to (1905), p. 23, and P. Bachmetjew (8). For papers descriptive of corrosion of pipes, &c., by artificial currents see Science Abstracts (in
recent
  years in the volumes devoted to engineering) under the heading " Traction, Electric; Electrolysis." The following are the references in the text:(1) Phil. Trans. R.S. for 1849, pt. i. p. 61; (2) Phil. Trans. R.S. vol. 151 (1861), p. 89, and vol. 152 (1862), p. 203; (3) Etude des courants telluriques (Paris, 1884) ; (4) Die Erdstrome im deutschen Reichstelegraphengebiet (Braunschweig, 1900) ; (5) Phil. Trans. R.S. vol. 158 (1868), p. 465, and vol. 16o (187o), p. 215; (6) Mein. de l'Academie St-Petersbourg, t. 31, No. 12 (1883); (7) T. Moureaux, Ann. du Bureau Central Met. (Annee 1893), I Mem. p. B 23; (8) P. Bachmetjew, Mina de l'Academie St-Petersbourg, vol. 12, No. 3 (1901) ; (9) Terrestrial Magnetism, vol. 3 (1898), p. 13o; (10) Journal Tel. Engineers (1881); (11) Proc. R.S. vol. 52 (1892), p. 191; (12) Akad. Abhandlung (Helsingfors, 1888) ; (13) Acad. Napoli Rend. (189o), and Atti (1894, 1895); (14) Fogg. Ann. vol. 76, p. 135; (15) Proc. R.S.E. vol. 13, p. 530; (16) A. Rucker, Phil. Mag. I (1901), p. 423, and R. T. Glazebrook, ibid. p. 432; (17) J. Edler, Elektrotech. Zeit. vol. 20 (1899) ; (18) L. A. Bauer, Terrestrial Magnetism, vol. I I (1906), p. 53. (C. CH.)
EARTH-NUT, the English name for a plant known botanically as Conopodium denudatum (or Bunium flexuosum), a member of the natural order Umbelliferae, which has a brown tuber-like root-stock the size of a chestnut. It grows in woods and fields, has a slender flexuous smooth stem 2 to 3 ft. high, much-divided leaves, and small white
flowers
  in many-rayed terminal compound umbels. Boswell Syme, in English Botany, iv. 114, says: " The common names of this plant in England are various. It is known as earth-nut, pig-nut, ar-nut, kipper-nut, hawk-nut, jar-nut, earth-chestnut and ground-nut. Though really excellent in taste and unobjectionable as food, it is disregarded in England by all but pigs and children, both of whom appreciate it and seek eagerly for it." Dr Withering de-scribes the roots as little inferior to chestnuts. In Holland
and elsewhere on the continent of Europe they are more generally eaten.


End of Article: EARTH CURRENTS


If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/DRO_ECG/EARTH_CURRENTS.html">
EARTH CURRENTS
</a>


(Previous)
EARTH (a word common to Teutonic languages, cf....
(Next)
EARTH PILLAR



 
 


JCSM was founded in 1997 and exists to help the community and bring people into a life-changing and productive relationship with Jesus Christ. JCSM offers over 200,000 free web pages, including its weekly inspirational emails that were sent continuously for over a decade.

Jesus Christ Saves Ministries
P.O. Box 9297
San Diego, CA  92169
1-888-887-0417 or Email

JCSM is a 501(c)(3), non-profit organization. Copyright © 1997-2012.
 

 

Sponsored Advertisements

Online First Aid and CPR Certification  .  DHA Solutions  .  PB Happy Hour Specials  .  Improvising Made Easy For Guitar and Bass  .  The Skeptic's Annotated Bible: Corrected and Explained  .  Home Equity Loans  .  First Aid and CPR Online  .  San Diego Music Lessons  .  10,000 Wise Quotes and Spiritual Sayings  .  Blow Up Your Site (For Free!)  .  San Diego DUI Lawyers  .  Jason Gastrich  .  Jordan Faith Gastrich  .  Divorce Secrets Revealed  .  Post Your Ad Link Free  .  San Diego Soccer Training  .  JCSM  .  Download Sermons  .  Custom Religious Banners, Build A Sign  .  Christian Singles Dating  .  Christian T-Shirts  .  Healing Christian Prayer  .  Bumper Authority  .  Personalized Blogs and Email  .  San Diego Haircuts  .  The Do the Math Diet  .  Stop Twitter Spam  .  Christian Conservative Work at Home Network  .  The Website of the Lord