Post by WalksInSpirit on Aug 7, 2005 19:32:11 GMT -5
Earth Changes Chat: 08-06-05
"Earth Changes Open Topic"
(08:19:13) (Nick) Yesterday was the new moon. So the "ether" should be calm (relatively) but also a time when severe earthquakes can occur because the Sun and Moon are puling the Earth's field in the same direction.
(08:23:15) (Nick) I was looking over the tectonics of the west coast of America. And found that an ancient geological plate, the Kula plate, sub ducted underneath the northern part of the Aleutians and the southern part of Alaska. It may be this [plate which caused the 1964 Anchorage earthquake.
(08:24:32) (WalksInSpirit) Cool, Nick! How stable, or instable is that plate now?
(08:24:39) (Nick) I had been looking for information to show that both Vesuvius and Mont Pelee will erupt during the earth changes, but no reliable data is available.
(08:26:48) (Nick) That plate is tilteddownwards facing roughly north. Now the North American plate is moving from the east to the west and pushing rocks and mantle over it. This part of the Aleutian chain could have produced the massive earthquake and tsunami recorded in Washington State in the 1700, and which hit Japan.
(08:28:02) (Nick) The earthquake about which we had a chat, it was described in an article in the Smithsonian magazine.
(08:28:41) (vjh) People on here the other night were saying they had dreams again about a tsunami. Wasn't it Thursday night?
(08:29:52) (Nick) Tonight is open chat, since I could not find relevant data on my topic: that both Mont Pelee and Vesuvius will catastrophically erupt during the earth changes to come.
(08:30:42) (Nick) It is the new moon, so human affairs should be peaceful, but the pull of the Sun and Moon add, so there is the possibility of severe earthquakes.
(08:31:38) (Nick) Not really, a change is much better happening slowly and smoothly, too much speed creates turbulence.
(08:32:55) (Nick) Think of how life will be damaged if those volcano's and others erupt explosively as they have in the past.
(08:33:52) (Nick) Those two volcano's could create conditions like the eruption of Mount Toba, on Sumatra did in 70,000 BC
(08:34:25) (vjh) How in the world do you know about a volcano erupting in 70,000 BC?
(08:34:29) (Nick) But even worse would be Kilimanjaro in Tanzania or Chimborazo in Ecuador.
(08:34:38) (WalksInSpirit) Nick, I think of those poor souls who were entombed in Pompeii.
(08:36:10) (Nick) The date of an eruption can be determined by stratigraphy. This is the science of recording sediments and counting the years which have passed since a particular layer was deposited.
(08:37:27) (Nick) DNA studies indicate that the human population was reduced, in that most human DNA can be traced back to common ancestors at that time.
(08:41:11) (Nick) In the sediment record, there have been a number of massive volcanic eruptions, which have little doubt, darkened the Sun's light. Such as Tambora in 1815 which produced a famine and the year without a summer.
(08:46:59) (merlin) nick, see where there were quakes in new Guinea & Tonga
(08:47:15) (Nick) OK are there any questions on earth changes? or news from the field? :o)
(08:48:12) (Nick) Yes, merlin, that area seems to be acting up. There are some active volcano's in that region which have been mildly erupting.
(08:48:37) (Nick) My personal concern being the central American region and the Caribbean.
(08:48:50) (vjh) Just what I mentioned above--that there are many people having dreams about a tsunami or tidal wave coming. But it's been 10 years since my grandmother came to me in a dream and showed me that there's going to be a drastic change in the river I live on.
(08:50:02) (Nick) Who knows, it might reverse its course, like the Mississippi did about 5,000 BC.
(08:50:27) (vjh) The Mississippi is supposed to have drastic changes again.
(08:52:26) (Nick) It might flow north again, like it did for a brief time, after the New Madrid earthquakes of 1811 and 1812.
(08:52:40) (vjh) Ten years is a long time in our time, but more and more people are having these dreams about a tidal wave.
(08:53:59) (Nick) If the tidal wave is to hit the southeast coast, it is most likely to come from two sources: one of the block faults along the Puerto Rico trench or from Mont Pelee undergoing a catastrophic eruption.
(08:54:04) (mark) has the Mississippi any dams?
(08:54:37) (vjh) How about that volcano on the Canary Islands?
(08:54:48) (Bill) i think its to flat to accommodate a dam Mark
(08:55:30) (mark) yeah,.wasn't thinking here
(08:56:57) (Nick) The Spanish geologists think the people who wrote that article must have been smoking something. :o) The greatest danger from an underwater landslide in the Canaries is to southern Europe.
(08:59:18) (Nick) Greg and Lora Little in their recent article on Bimini, reported that the sea level around the Bimini islands rose and dropped by about 60 feet sometime around 5,000 BC. I may be a bit off on the dates.
(08:59:54) (mark) how could they know this Nick?
(09:00:52) (Nick) They did some basic stratigraphy, and calculated approximately those years. This was in the last issue of Venture Inward.
(09:01:16) (merri) isn't the Red Sea shrinking by 5 feet a year, Nick?
(09:03:35) (Bill) Elnino is caused by the trade winds and when they slack off the ocean levels are 30' lower on the coasts they normally blow from
(09:03:51) (Nick) The Red Sea is a bizarre place geologically. In the middle the axis is a ridge and is expanding underneath, both the African and the Arabian plates. Now as well as that the Arabian plate is overriding the Red Sea and the African plate.
(09:04:00) (Bill) 30' higher i should say
(09:05:06) (Nick) I would have to go to Bimini myself and see. But with schooling coming up it looks unlikely.
(09:07:33) (Nick) Would be nice, :o) but I think that more likely I would be sent to breathe toxic fumes and catch volcanic bombs from the explosive volcano's in the eastern Caribbean.