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a rocky path between two cliff faces Tom Williamson

SCIENCE AND DOWSING

Did you know that metals hidden beneath the surface of the earth can be accurately located without the use of a metal detector, and that the technique for doing so has been practised for hundreds of years? The method is called dowsing, an ancient and curious art involving a forked twig and a skilled hand. The technique is even capable of locating underground bodies of water.

 

Tom Williamson brings this fascinating science to light in his book, Dowsing: New Light on an Ancient Art, which is available to buy now courtesy of Amazon.

Science and Dowsing: Welcome
light streaming into a chasm underground Tom Williamson

AN ANCIENT PRACTICE

In the mining regions of Europe, dowsing with a forked twig had by the late 1600s become a standard technique for locating concealed lodes of metal ore. Local peasants were also beginning to use the technique to find underground water. 

Given that, in these hard-rock regions, ore lodes and flowing groundwater are often controlled by similar fault and fracture systems, the appliance of science to dowsing might start with the hypothesis that skilled dowsers have learned to respond to geophysical signals linked to such faults.

Science and Dowsing: About

DOWSING IN ART

Watched by curious onlookers, a dowser searches for a metal ore lode hidden beneath the soil. 


Detail from woodcut in Balthasar Rossler’s Speculum Metallurgiae Poliitissimum, 1700.

woodcut detail of dowsing Tom Williamson
Science and Dowsing: Latest Work
Detail from woodcut in Balthasar Tom Williamson

A surveyor marks out the course of a concealed mineral vein located by a dowser. 


Detail from woodcut in Balthasar Rossler’s Speculum Metallurgiae Politissimum, 1700.

Science and Dowsing: About
a path cut into a hilly landscape with a tree in the foreground Tom Williamson

INVESTIGATING THE SCIENCE OF DOWSING

For various reasons, including the fact that few geologists have been involved in the design of dowsing experiments, and the difficulties of conducting full double-blind tests under realistic geological conditions, only a few scientific tests of the geophysical hypothesis have been carried out.

Instead, investigators have focused on dowsers’ claims to locate small pipes through which water is flowing.  

 

Since such pipes create no geophysical signals, the geophysical hypothesis predicts that dowsers can’t locate them. Broadly, that’s what double-blind experiments have shown.

CHANGING THE NARRATIVE ON DOWSING

However, when we look at the few experiments that have tested dowsers’ abilities to locate concealed underground faults, fractures, or other discontinuities, a different story emerges. 

 

In particular, there is now evidence that some skilled dowsers may have learned to respond to the enhanced levels of microseismic activity above such discontinuities. 

an aerial view of a waterfall Tom Williamson
Science and Dowsing: Services

DOWSING FOR OPALS

According to the geophysical hypothesis, some successful dowsers have learned to adapt their ideomotor responses to relevant geophysical cues such as the enhanced levels of microseisms above faults, fractures and other discontinuities.


So how could dowsers in Oz detect beautiful lumps of opal that are too small to generate geophysical signals? Read about dowsing for opals here.

Australian opal Tom Williamson
Science and Dowsing: About
an old, disused well jutting from the earth Tom Williamson

THE PHYSICS PROFESSOR AND THE DOWSER

Working with the German aid agency GTZ, water dowser Hans Schroter achieved a remarkable level of success in locating water supplies in particular geological situations. 

 

Although Schroter’s accumulated geological knowledge almost certainly played a part, the exceptional success rate suggests that Schroter may have learned to subconsciously respond to relevant geophysical cues.

Science and Dowsing: About
water-filled cavern Tom Williamson

Unearth the science behind dowsing and other subjects covered by Tom in his many books, which are available now via Amazon.

Science and Dowsing: Quote
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