It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by Darkblade71
I hope your hubby is wrong but at the same time, I hope he is right.
Will keep an eye out
*pluck*
reply to post by CodyOutlaw
I'm a former West Texas resident. Man, I miss it.
Originally posted by FissionSurplus
I talked to my husband some more about this. He said that, before the Japan earthquake last year, he was lying on the couch watching TV, and he felt weird shocks. He at first thought he was having heart palpitations and it freaked him out. Approximately 6 hours later they announced the earthquake in Japan.
Today's incident happened when he was sitting in his chair with his feet up on the pull-out writing board of his desk. It was a series of vibrational shocks, and concerned him enough to voice it to me. The time was 2:50 pm Central Time.
We talked about how in the world he feels these things, and he thinks it is our location, on a hard, solid, huge rock, in which the ground is also very hard, and we are on a concrete slab. I don't remember him mentioning anything like this when we lived in the DFW area.
Also, in thinking about how some guy in Texas could feel vibrations for a seismic event that happens half-way around the world, we're thinking that maybe the disturbance happens deep within the earth, creating a harmonic dissonance, and the disturbance finds a weak point along a fault and expresses itself. Makes sense when you think about it, since the earth is one big ball. Why should seismic events happen in a vacuum?
I have been prepared for nearly any type of disaster, except what nuclear can bring.. that will affect everything very badly..
Originally posted by FissionSurplus
reply to post by pasiphae
That's what freaks me out. All this talk about an "Extinction Level Event" (ELE) if reactor #4 crumbles and all those MOX fuel rods which were FRESH and never used are exposed to the open air with no water to cool them is really upsetting.
One thing about the time we live in, it is certainly never boring, is it?