Article: <[email protected]>
From: [email protected](Nancy )
Subject: Re: BIZARRE WEATHER CHANGES
Date: 1 Mar 1997 20:17:05 GMT
In article <[email protected]> Steve
Courton writes:
>> This Weather Watch indicates recent activity only, since
1995
>> . ... This Weather Watch only reports activity that can
be
>> considered truly unusual. Typical weather, no matter how
>> extreme, is not listed here. This is to show the recent
trends,
>> without clutter.
>> Nancy <[email protected]>
>
> Weather extremes are common every year. If you consider
> parameters like heat, cold, max. precip., min. precip, snow
for
> a 100 year record station then there is a 5% chance each
year
> that one of these parameters will be an all time record.
Multiply
> that by 10,000+ stations over the world and you will see
that
> breaking all time records is commonplace every year.
> [email protected] (Steve Courton)
Steve, it's not just Podunk having the hottest day on July 14th, it's broad areas getting the same thing. It's not just a big snowstorm, its snow falling months early in freak summer snowstorms. It's deluges happening in desert areas, and places all around the world during the same year. Its the Antarctic ice shelf melting when the AIR has not gotten warmer, except perhaps by a degree! It's all that combined with the incidence of deep earthquakes increasing dramatically, just over the past few years, and magnetic diffusion, and the Earth's slowing rotation, and the heating up of the oceans from the bottom up!
........
Troubled Times
http://www.zetatalk.com/info/tinfo26j.htm
A Troubled Times member reports: ... I have looked at earthquakes in the range of 550 to 650 km, which is in what is called the transition area of the Mantle. From what I've been able to read so far, this is the area that would separate from the crust as the inner core realigns itself magnetically. I've looked at the data on this back to 1963 to 36 years.
I don't give a damn about Richter Scale since at that depth they rarely show more than 4 to 5 on the Richter Scale, and also since they are almost invariably in the mid Pacific in the neighborhood of the 180 longitude somewhere around -20 latitude to +20 latitude, this is apparently the weakest point in the crust at this time. I've not compiled the data on this part, but it appears that the longitude is starting to spread out beyond the -177 to +177 longitude. I believe this is significant, and should indicate that the break with the crust is loosening on a gradually wider arena, but this is only a suggestion at this point.
Here's the total for 1985 - 1996 quakes per year in the 550-650 km deep range:
Year Deep Quakes 85 139 86 167 87 147 88 134 89 120 90 141 91 128 92 135 93 118 94 152 95 255 96 271 (as of October 27)
Since the Zetas suggest that the event is in the northern region's summer, one might expect that this would be the time when the earth quakes are greater. This is exactly the case. Quakes are 1/3, greater 85-94, in the April to September time as opposed to the October to March time. This accelerates big time after 1994.