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Originally posted by zeeon
More Dead animals, this time in New Zealand.
Dead Snappers
Whats going on here people?
Originally posted by SquirrelNutz
Originally posted by zeeon
Twitter is blowing up about the story.
Alot of people are turning to End of Times prophecy on this one...
You can use Google to watch the twitter stream -
Twitter Real Time updates
Crazy times people!
Can you post a few for the less 'twit savvy' (and because your link goes nowhere (for me, at least))
Originally posted by alchemist2012
Originally posted by zeeon
More Dead animals, this time in New Zealand.
Dead Snappers
Whats going on here people?
I look into that earlier but there was no number given did you get a count
Originally posted by karen61057
reply to post by shikori
Sorry to disagree but the allowable amount of leakage of any nuclear power plant is ZERO. No amount, not even a tiny smidgen is acceptable. So no a small amount that will kill off animals but not people and wont be detected is impossible. Now I am not saying that leaks are not possible. We all know about Three Mile Island and Chernoble and accidents happen. But we'd know about it if there was a problem at the power plant.
Originally posted by Black_Fox
reply to post by zeeon
Cant really put any stock inbible prophicies in this day and age.
With the tecnology we have,and the corrupt people that live in this world,making these "prophiecies" come true,isnt that hard.
Forced fullfillment of such things can further people's agendas.
On Tuesday afternoon, Fox 41 News spoke with Mark Marraccini, a spokesman for the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife. Marraccini confirmed that several hundred dead birds had been found last week near the campus of Murray State University.
He said the birds had been found "scattered round" several city blocks near the university, and included grackles, cowbirds, starlings, red-winged blackbirds and robins.
As with the cases in Arkansas and Gilbertsville, Ky., wildlife experts are at a loss when it comes to a cause.
Marraccini said authorities, "did a full toxicology screen and necropsy, and there was no poison, no disease, no trauma. There was really nothing they could put their fingers on that would cause the deaths."
"It could be natural," he said. "It could be something in the weather. But there was nothing that any of the tests showed that could be the cause."
While some might be alarmed by the mysterious occurrences, Marraccini said it's not unheard of for birds to die in mass quantities from natural causes.
"Sometimes those things happen," he said.