N.I.G.H.T. Paranormal Forums
 
Advanced Search
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
September 08, 2010, 01:37:08 AM
News: Check out the Indiana Paranormal Convention! We hope to see you there in May 2009!

News: Attendee Tickets and Vendor Booth Spaces are now available for purchase for the Indiana Paranormal Convention!

News: You can now purchase IndyParaCon T-Shirts!

News: Campsites are now available for purchase!
Pages: [1]
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Topic Tools  
Read December 09, 2008, 07:15:38 PM #0
SCary

New Madrid Fault Line...and a unified theory!

Ok here is a theory for all you fellow conspirators out there. You might recall a few months ago when Indiana experienced a slight earthquake that was powerful enough to give people an early morning wake up call. This tremor was reported to be periodic. I did some research into the history of earthquakes and was surprised to discover that Indiana, and much of the midwest, lies on a fault line that scientists now call the New Madrid Fault line. Nothing to worry about, right?

The last time Indiana experienced any major seismic activity due to this fault line was back in the early 1800s. At the time, the area was sparsely populated so thankfully not too many people were affected. However, the earthquake was powerful enough to reverse the flow of the Mississippi river, sink entire lakes and create new ones in the Midwest, and a few buildings were destroyed. These things are cyclical.

Also interesting to note is the rising number of towns and cities within the last few years that have been affected by what are described as noxious fumes. One very plausible theory out there is that organic waste gets trapped under the Earth and gets dislodged by seismic activity, rising to the surface in the form of these fumes. Animals have also been known to act erratically before an earthquake, so it would be interesting to see if pets have been acting odd with greater frequency. Pull up a brief linear plot of seismic activity for the past few decades and you can see an interesting trend.

http://www.coaps.fsu.edu/~maue/blog/earthquake.jpg

As we head into the 21st century, we are told to prepare for any number of outcomes due to the effects of climate change, earthquakes only being one of them. Have you noticed that they are starting to add dampeners to many of the overpasses on I-465? Pay attention to them the next time you drive by one. Climate change might be a nice way to wrap up much of the world's unusual activity into one neat little box. It explains why the bees are dying. It explains why storms are becoming more powerful, droughts are appearing more and more, male fertility rates are plummeting, and why weather is shifting. But if Anthropogenic causes (human made causes) are the reason for all of these catastrophes, then why is climate change on other planets?

Just do a few google searches and NASA can tell you that storms have been picking up with greater frequency on the other planets in our solar system. Some are even turning into geometric shapes. Could it be that what is causing these changes in our solar system may also be what is responsible for the increased seismic activity on our planet? We do not know the extent that human technology would affect earthquakes, but my guess is that it would be insignificant. The only thing that could link our planet with the activity on other planets is some new kind of arrival to the solar system.

There is a celestial body in the book of Revelation called Wormwood. This body goes by other names in other cultures. The Babylonians called it Nibiru. According to the legend, it passes through our solar system once every 3600 years. Scientists have long suspected that there is something far beyond Pluto, perhaps past the Kuiper belt, that creates a gravitational tug on our solar system. Something is there, but we don't know what. If the ancient sources are correct, could many of these changes be caused by Nibiru? One thing that could escape our detection for so long would be a brown dwarf, protostars that do not have enough mass to create their own fusion. If it came close enough to our own sun, that might be all it needs to start up the reactors again. The consequences to human life are obvious. If our solar system is in fact a binary star system, the only way to find out is the hard way.

In the mean time, in the unlikely event that the New Madrid Fault Line wakes up with an awful hangover, pay attention to the animals and try to invest in a house that floats high above the Earth's crust.


Light up the darkness.
Offline  
Read December 10, 2008, 02:11:10 AM #1
MChaney

Re: New Madrid Fault Line...and a unified theory!

Very interesting! Thank you for sharing.
Does anyone remember where they were during the Indiana Earthquake?
I was asleep and woke with the rumblings to hear my screaming terrified daughter. She sleeps on the second floor of the house and sure felt that shake since she sleeps in a waterbed.

I agree with the animals acting erratically as I have what I call a storm dog. She is very sensitive to storms and I know hours before they come because she gets very clinging and starts to hide. I can usually tell how strong the storms will be according to her reaction. If they are strong she hides under the couch hours before arrival. She was rescued from a kill shelter and has never been exposed to storms as she is totally domesticated so her bad experience took place before she came to her forever home. I have learned to watch the dog and her behavior as it is generally more accurate than the Professional Weathermen on tv.

I have read quite a bit on the fault line and how it can become active again with little or no notice. So anyone that knows me, knows I always have a plan and now with the help of the Red Cross, I am more prepared. Check out this website for your list of things to have on hand incase the "big one" hits.
http://www.redcross.org/services/disaster/0,1082,0_583_,00.html




I am here to help people, Not help people believe!
Offline  
Read December 10, 2008, 05:42:12 AM #2
MChaney

Re: New Madrid Fault Line...and a unified theory!

Interesting item on Niribu
http://www.hotspotsz.com/PlanetX-or-Niburu.html




I am here to help people, Not help people believe!
Offline  
Read December 11, 2008, 04:35:58 AM #3
LStradley

Re: New Madrid Fault Line...and a unified theory!

I was at work for one of them and it was weird when I felt the building sway. Cool! course you couldn't get me to live in California for nothing. LOL


I see stupid people!
Offline  
Read December 11, 2008, 12:34:46 PM #4
Re: New Madrid Fault Line...and a unified theory!

I was in Cincinati.. See what happens when I leave the state? Though I did feel the quake there in Cinci I was out of town for work


Rick M.
Offline  
Read December 15, 2008, 10:13:03 PM #5
TCallahan

Re: New Madrid Fault Line...and a unified theory!

I was at work on the 21st floor and felt the rumble and the building sway....I was like what the f***??!  I was calling everyone saying, "did you feel that?"  I sure as hell did.  I had experienced the building swaying in storms and what not before, but never like it did that night.  It was crazy.


Terra C.

Offline  
Read December 17, 2008, 12:16:44 PM #6
MChaney

Re: New Madrid Fault Line...and a unified theory!

Check out this article from the news today:
"Death map" shows heat a big hazard to Americans
By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor Maggie Fox, Health And Science Editor Wed Dec 17, 10:36 am ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Heat is more likely to kill an American than an earthquake, and thunderstorms kill more than hurricanes do, according to a "death map" published on Tuesday.

Researchers who compiled the county-by-county look at what natural disasters kill Americans said they hope their study will help emergency preparedness officials plan better.

Heat and drought caused 19.6 percent of total deaths from natural hazards, with summer thunderstorms causing 18.8 percent and winter weather causing 18.1 percent, the team at the University of South Carolina found.

Earthquakes, wildfires and hurricanes combined were responsible for fewer than 5 percent of all hazard deaths.

Writing in BioMed Central's International Journal of Health Geographics, they said they hoped to dispel some myths about what the biggest threats to life and limb are.

"According to our results, the answer is heat," Susan Cutter and Kevin Borden of the University of South Carolina wrote in their report, which gathered data from 1970 to 2004.

"I think what most people would think, if you say what is the major cause of death and destruction, they would say hurricanes and earthquakes and flooding," Cutter said in a telephone interview. "They wouldn't say heat."

"What is noteworthy here is that over time, highly destructive, highly publicized, often-catastrophic singular events such as hurricanes and earthquakes are responsible for relatively few deaths when compared to the more frequent, less catastrophic such as heat waves and severe weather," they wrote.

The most dangerous places to live are much of the South, because of the heat risk, the hurricane coasts and the Great Plains states with their severe weather, Cutter said.

The south central United States is also a dangerous area, with floods and tornadoes.

California is relatively safe, they found.

"It illustrates the impact of better building codes in seismically prone areas because the fatalities in earthquakes have gone down from 1900 because things don't collapse on people any more," Cutter said.

"It shows that simple improvements in building codes in high-wind environments like hurricane coasts, and the effectiveness of evacuation in advance of hurricanes, has reduced the mortality from hurricanes and tropical storms," she added.

"So there are some things we are pretty good at in getting people out of harm's way and reducing fatalities."

Cutter said there is no national database on such deaths and this was a first try at getting one together.

(Editing by Will Dunham)
And here is a link to the map that shows what we are likely to die from in Indiana.
It is predicted tornadoes. Imagine that!
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081217/hl_nm/us_death_usa/print




I am here to help people, Not help people believe!
Offline  
Read December 20, 2008, 04:22:29 PM #7
SCary

Re: New Madrid Fault Line...and a unified theory!

Indianapolis is a pretty safe place, given this map!


Light up the darkness.
Offline  
Read December 28, 2008, 09:33:38 AM #8
TCallahan

Re: New Madrid Fault Line...and a unified theory!

That is still pretty scary!  Even in Indiana!


Terra C.

Offline  
Read January 07, 2009, 04:39:41 AM #9
MChaney

Re: New Madrid Fault Line...and a unified theory!

In Indiana we are more likely to die from a tornado than an earthquake. Comforting huh? LOL




I am here to help people, Not help people believe!
Offline  
Read January 07, 2009, 10:19:51 PM #10
TCallahan

Re: New Madrid Fault Line...and a unified theory!

Stupid natural disasters.....


Terra C.

Offline  
Read January 08, 2009, 07:05:28 AM #11
LStradley

Re: New Madrid Fault Line...and a unified theory!

There is a reason for all of these disasters. And peole keep talking about the green house effect and the polar bears dying and other animals dying out. Personally, yes, I think mankind has a lot to do with most of the planet's problems, however, I also believe that the warming effect, for example, is a natural occurrence. From the geological record the planet has warmed up and cooled off for eons. We may just be in another warm up period. Then will follow another ice age. At least that's one of the multitudes of theories.

There are still glaciers around and they move, yes move, about an inch a year. Most are moving forward again. And at one time most of the planet was covered in ice.

Fault lines are only plates where the teutonic plates meet up. The land masses, above and below water, are on a constant move. We just can feel most of them because we move with them at the same time. Same with the earth spinning. We can't feel that either. LOL

ok i shut up now


I see stupid people!
Offline  
Read January 10, 2009, 12:02:21 AM #12
TCallahan

Re: New Madrid Fault Line...and a unified theory!

I agree with you, Loretta.  I also believe we will be in another ice age eventually.  It is just something that happens over and over again and it takes time....a lot of time.


Terra C.

Offline  
Pages: [1]
Jump to:  

Page created in 0.106 seconds with 17 queries.