Like i said i will continue to post my research into the sun and earthquakes.
On going through my findings i have come to the conclusion that maybe some solar activity might have an affect on the earth's crust/techtonic plates.
So im now 50/50 on the idear.
As promised, below you will find further research. Enjoy
It did take me a few hours, and this time i have input more information.
Research Starting May 2010
2nd Pichilemu (Chile) (6.0, May 2)- NO-NAME ACTIVE REGION: An unstable nest of magnetic fields emerged over the sun's northeastern horizon yesterday,
and it is crackling with C-class solar flares.
4th Biobío (Chile) (6.4, May 3)- EMERGING SUNSPOTS: As of 1321 UT on May 3rd, there are four sunspot groups on the Earth-facing side of the sun.
3rd Sumatra (Indonesia) (7.2, May 9) - AMAZING ERUPTIONS: This weekend, magnetic fields around sunspot 1069 became unstable and erupted--over and over
again. On May 8th alone, the active region produced more than half a dozen flares.
Vanuatu (7.2, May 28) - WEAK IMPACT: A coronal mass ejection (CME) hit Earth's magnetic field during the early hours of May 28th, but the impact was
weak and did not trigger strong geomagnetic activity. The chances for auroras tonight are subsiding.
June 2010
Nicobar Islands (Indian Ocean) (7.7, Jun 13) - SOLAR FLARE UPDATE: Sunspot 1079 near the sun's southwestern limb has joined this weekend's flare
show (described below) with a series of its own M- and C-class eruptions. An even stronger M2-class flare on June 12th (0055 UT) sparked a bright
flash of extreme ultraviolet radiation, propelled a shock wave through the sun's atmosphere, and hurled a billion-ton coronal mass ejection (CME)
into space. The CME is expected to miss Earth--so no auroras.
Papua (Indonesia) (7.0, Jun 16) - No sunspot on this day. There were strong Solar winds
speed: 508.3 km/sec.
2nd Solomon Islands (6.7, Jun 26) - New sunspot growing + LUNAR ECLIPSE.
Oaxaca (Mexico) (6.2, Jun 30) - One sunspot.
5th Biobío (Chile) (6.5, Jul 14) - Sunspot 1087 is slowly decaying, but it still poses a threat for C-class + SOLAR ACTIVITY: The magnetic canopy of
sunspot 1087 is crackling with low-level solar flares. The biggest of the day so far, a C1-flare at 1230 UT on July 14th, caught the attention of
NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory.
I have decided only to go with 6+ mag quakes this time as it would have taken me days to input all the quakes!!!