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Originally posted by JakiusFogg
What the hell are all those flashing lights on the video????
Originally posted by JakiusFogg
reply to post by michaelmcclen
Transfomers are pretty serious pieces of kit, to have blowing up. There is only a few places in the world that make them. So lose some, and you could be screwed for months.
On the flood in the Mississippi. I wonder if the water would be used as a freqency conductor. That is to say to transmit the vibrational signal deeper into the earth (as water penetrates the rock) to help split it. Like a water cutter, just on a massive scale.
"We don't know how or why they collapsed," said Brandon Baker, the director of emergency management in Conway County. "We just know it was fast."
Read more: www.newstimes.com...
So exactly what events have happened recently that are causing people to take a close look at the New Madrid fault zone? Well, just consider the following examples of things that have been popping up in the news lately.... According to the U.S. Geological Survey, more than 500 measurable earthquakes have been recorded in central Arkansas just since September. A magnitude-3.8 earthquake that shook north-central Indiana on December 30th is being called "unprecedented." It was strong enough to actually cause cracks along the ground and it was felt in portions of Ohio, Illinois, Wisconsin and Kentucky. More than 3,000 red-wing blackbirds fell out of the sky dead in the Arkansas town of Beebe on New Year's Eve. Large numbers of dead birds were also found in Kentucky right around Christmas. Approximately 500 dead blackbirds and starlings were also recently discovered in Pointe Coupee Parish, Louisiana. Approximately 100,000 fish washed up dead on the shores of the Arkansas River just last week. So could all of these things have some other very simple explanation? Possibly. But the fact that they all happened in or around the New Madrid fault zone is starting to raise some eyebrows.