|
Post by nyx on Jul 18, 2018 16:23:38 GMT
|
|
|
Post by tommi01 on Jul 18, 2018 20:03:26 GMT
We had two earthquakes here in the southern part of the UK today. Really unusual.
|
|
|
Post by nyx on Jul 18, 2018 20:48:53 GMT
tommi01,
It was said on the internet, having the planets on one side of the sun is very rare.
We have to watch for volcanos, also.
No telling what is going to happen?
|
|
|
Post by HAL on Jul 18, 2018 21:01:28 GMT
There are earthquakes and volcano eruptions every day somewhere.
And the UK has minor ones on a monthly basis.
You can follow the daily activity in real time (plus all the historic seismographs) on the British Geological Survey website.
Yep, the same people who blew apart the Berwyn ufo story.
HAL.
|
|
|
Post by nyx on Jul 18, 2018 22:01:46 GMT
HAL,
Of course I was not there, but according to Wikipedia, the British Geological Survey convinced the MoD it was 3.5 earthquake.
Then the MoD had to come up with an explanation for the unusual lights in the sky, so the MoD came up with the idea that the lights were from a meteor that happened at the very same second as the earthquake, or if not a meteor it was "earthquake lights".
Nick Pope claims people from RAF Rudloe Manor were in control of the "mop up".
Again, all of this is clear as "mud".
|
|
|
Post by GhostofEd on Jul 18, 2018 22:04:29 GMT
As long as the sun is not shifting position with respect to earth I would not worry about what the other planets are doing.
|
|
|
Post by HAL on Jul 20, 2018 19:49:15 GMT
nyx,
But no one ever found a hole in the ground. And any meteor capable of showing up on seismographs and shaking buildings would have left one.
As for the meteor shower relationship to this, doesn't it seem odd to you that people were seeing meteors after the shaking and saying that this was the cause ?
It is similar to hearing a clap of thunder, coming out of the house and seeing a flash of lightning. Then saying the two were connected.
The cause after the effect.
But you are correct in one thing. There are more holes in the Berwyn story than there are in a Swiss cheese.
Cue jayceedove.
Ed,
Still working on that tan ?
HAL
|
|
|
Post by flatearth on Jul 20, 2018 22:55:36 GMT
FYI, a meteorite hit near my home in Michigan last January. I didn't see it or feel it, but I did hear it over a TV that had the volume turned up. It was very loud and powerful. The meteor exploded in the atmosphere and the remnants landed several miles away. There was no crater because the surviving pieces were small, but it did register as a seismic event. www.scientificamerican.com/article/did-michigan-meteor-really-cause-an-earthquake/Flat
|
|