I looked it up too, but stilled my rushing in, having corrected you once today.

Basen is "sort of" a word. It reads Base'N', some kinda tech talk about 
something technical. That's the only definition I could find. In Wikipedia, not 
in any dictionary.

For a basin, think sink, which has an 'I' in it, which is what basin has too!  
:-)


On Nov 29, 2011, at 22:44 , P. J. Alling wrote:

> And I checked the spelling and definition too, just to be sure.
> 
> On 11/29/2011 10:55 PM, Ann Sanfedele wrote:
>> Thumbs up from me. Challenge Brooksian spelling though :-)
>> 
>> ann
>> 
>> 
>> On 11/29/2011 20:45, P. J. Alling wrote:
>>> One more from Stony Creek, Swimming Basen
>>> 
>>> http://dl.dropbox.com/u/1604247/PESO/PESO%20--%20swimmingbasen.html
>>> 
>>> Equipment: Pentax K20D w/smc Pentax FA 43mm f1.9 Limited
>>> 
>>> As usual comments are welcome but may be totally ignored.

Joseph McAllister
pentax...@mac.com

The Big Bang was silent, and  invisible in it's beginning moments.
Photons were one of the earliest particles to develop, 
but I don't think any were able to escape for a little bit more.
Once they could, there would have been a flash during expansion.
No one would notice, of course, for another 4.2 billion years.
Now we are trying to catch up by looking out, and back in time
to that infinitesimally small fraction of a millisecond in an attempt 
to see what caused that singularity to become the Big Bang. This attempt 
will fail in any visual way, as the furthest galaxies and elements 
are now moving faster than light by recent theory, making the 
information sought beyond a theoretical event horizon.

— update to the Pentaxian's thoughts on particle physics, so far.


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