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Originally posted by PuterMan
reply to post by JustMike
Mike, over on the QuakeWatch thread this subject of alternative earthquake detection and prediction has come up.
I am posting links back to QW so you can see what was said.
I am hoping that they will come over to this thread and get involved here.
Post by oldgoat
Post by oldgoat
Post by warpcrafter
Post by alexgia
Post by westcoast
AURORA SURPRISE: On May 29th, the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) tilted south and opened a crack in Earth's magnetosphere. Solar wind poured in and fueled a G1-class geomagnetic storm. Northern Lights were sighted as far south as Wisconsin:
Originally posted by PuterMan
reply to post by oldgoat
I can't see any earthquake event on the 16th May that would fit other than 5's. How long did this go on, and normally does it stop before or after the events?
There was a bunch of 5+ on the 16th (10 of them), 3 on the 17th, 2 on the 18th and then on the 19th the 6.0 in Peru plus about 5 in the 5+ range.
[edit on 30/5/2010 by PuterMan]
Originally posted by space cadet
reply to post by oldgoat
Saturday afternoon I woke up ( I work 3rd) and my ears were driving me crazy, it was unlike anything I have ever experienced with them. Things sounded so loud that should not, and loud things were much much louder, along with a strange ringing, it was not a ringing sound per say, it sounded like very loud machinery, with several different pitches of tones all at once, around 130 in the morning it just stopped.
I was looking around today for events (earthquakes, volcano, ect) and came across this article on spaceweather.com stating the magnetosphere had tilted and allowed a crack, which let a geomagnetic storm stream in for several hours. Personally I think this is what caused my ears to act like they did. It may be true for you too.
AURORA SURPRISE: On May 29th, the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) tilted south and opened a crack in Earth's magnetosphere. Solar wind poured in and fueled a G1-class geomagnetic storm. Northern Lights were sighted as far south as Wisconsin:
spaceweather.com...