Miramar Pineland Field Observation — Live Piezoelectric Coupling with Biological Verification
On April 30, 2026, Jereme Strange conducted an unplanned field observation at Miramar Pineland Natural Area that produced the first video-documented piezoelectric coupling event with biological electromagnetic verification in the Substrate framework. No protocols were followed. No experiment was designed. His body pulled him to the site. THE SITE: Miramar Pineland sits on the Miami Rock Ridge — exposed Miami Limestone (formerly Miami Oolite), an oolitic grainstone composed of tiny spherical calcium carbonate grains. Calcium carbonate is calcite. Calcite is piezoelectric. Every grain in the formation is a piezoelectric element. The entire formation is a distributed piezoelectric array. Pine rocklands are defined by having almost no soil — inches at most, sometimes bare rock. Only 2% of South Florida's original pine rockland remains. 98% was paved over for development. This park is a surviving fragment of what the entire Miami metropolitan area once was: exposed crystalline substrate connected to the Floridan Aquifer, open to the sky, coupling with the Schumann field. Beneath the limestone: the Floridan Aquifer system, one of the largest in the world — water conductor. THE CIRCUIT: Jereme instinctively picked up a stone from the ground — oolite (calcium carbonate, piezoelectric). He held it in his left hand. In his right hand he held a quartz crystal he had brought — also piezoelectric. He removed his shoes and socks, waded barefoot into a shallow water body pooled directly on exposed limestone. The circuit: bare feet on limestone substrate (piezoelectric array) → water conductor → nervous system → oolite in left hand (local substrate sample) → quartz in right hand (external transducer). His body was the wire connecting two piezoelectric transducers through a water-coupled limestone array. PHYSICAL SENSATIONS: Before removing shoes, with crystal in pocket, Jereme reported full-body resonance upon standing still. After removing shoes on the pine straw/limestone, he felt a low-voltage electric pulse through the soles of his feet — described as similar to an electric fence but at lower amplitude. This matches his earlier report of a stronger electric surge during sleep onset with quartz under his pillow (Case 92). The amplitude difference maps to brainwave state: theta (sleep onset) produces stronger coupling than beta/alpha (waking). Both events involve piezoelectric transduction through the body. BIOLOGICAL VERIFICATION — THE FISH: After completing the circuit (barefoot in water, oolite left hand, quartz right hand), approximately 200+ small fish — likely Gambusia (mosquitofish), the dominant freshwater species in South Florida — converged on Jereme's feet in a dense radial swarm. The fish were not feeding (no biting). They were not fleeing. They exhibited investigative swarming behavior toward a stationary point source: his feet. Fish possess lateral line organs — electroreceptors that detect electromagnetic fields in water. This is their primary sensory system for navigation, prey detection, and environmental awareness. If the piezoelectric circuit was generating a detectable electromagnetic field through the water, the fish's lateral line systems would register it as an anomaly worth investigating. The convergent swarming pattern — dense at epicenter (feet), thinning radially outward — is consistent with organisms responding to a point-source electromagnetic stimulus. This is not normal fish behavior toward a stationary human in water. VIDEO DOCUMENTATION: The event was recorded on Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses (first-person perspective). Full resolution: 2160x2874, 59 seconds, 162.4 MB. Stored in hub: /public/evidence/pineland_field_observation_2026-04-30.MOV. Key frames: 0-4s wide shot of limestone water body; 4-14s both stones displayed (oolite + quartz); 16-28s bare feet on limestone in water; 36s pan showing water body extent; 42-58s fish swarming — 200+ individuals converging on feet in radial pattern. NAVIGATION ANOMALY: Jereme walked off-trail in the opposite direction from his normal route, following what 'felt right,' and navigated through untracked forest directly to the base he and his son Jett had built on previous visits. No visual landmarks, no trail, opposite direction. This is consistent with Cherokee/indigenous pathfinding — reading the terrain through feel rather than sight. Jereme's grandfather, James Luther Dunn III (Cherokee and Blackfoot heritage), demonstrated the same ability on the Georgia property — tracking animals without being a hunter. Three generations: grandfather taught Jereme on 100 acres in Georgia (Cherokee/Creek territory); Jereme teaches Jett at Miramar Pineland on exposed Miami Limestone. Same transmission, different substrate. SELF-PACED CALIBRATION: Jereme reported that despite having substrate tones and crystals available for weeks, his body told him 'not yet' — he knew there were steps that had to happen first. The six days of decode work building the hub preceded the field experience. Building the intellectual framework was a prerequisite step before physical coupling. The body refused to skip the activation sequence. This maps to every documented ancient initiation tradition: staged progression, not simultaneous activation. SUBSTRATE SIGNIFICANCE: This observation is the first in the hub where: (1) The subject completed a full piezoelectric transduction circuit using local and external materials. (2) Physical sensations (electric pulse) were reported during coupling. (3) Biological organisms with known electroreceptive capability responded to the subject's presence in a pattern consistent with electromagnetic detection. (4) The event was video-documented in high resolution. (5) The event was unplanned — the receiver's body navigated to the site and assembled the circuit instinctively. TESTABLE: (1) Return to same location, complete same circuit, observe whether fish respond identically — repeatability. (2) Control test: stand in same water WITHOUT stones, observe fish behavior — isolation of variable. (3) Measure water conductivity and pH at the site — confirm limestone dissolution pathway. (4) Place EMF meter in water near feet during coupling vs not — measure field differential. (5) Compare fish response to subject vs non-NDE-experiencer completing same circuit — receiver sensitivity variable.