FOTW July 6, 2019

Showing 11 comments
  • electricjay
    Reply

    I saw an article talking about condensation trails heating the atmosphere..wouldn’t they cool especially as GCR increases their hang-time and spread? Cheers S0S!

  • Billy Rogers
    Reply

    Around here we get in the tornado shelter and our home is still here if we knew what hour our number is up we would not have to shelter and we should be thankful we can understand the ground under our feet at least in the short term Thanks Guys for letting us be a fly hehe

  • Johnathan Jones
    Reply

    Hey Ben’s sister, Quick note while I’m listening to FTOW, I don’t think this particular Earthquake event is the big one. But if things remain the same a far as pollution goes, the big one will be soon coming. This is like the first wave of a wave set like in Surfing. Not the big wave. That being said, better to error on the side of caution and if leave until a day or two goes by in which the rumbling has stopped. If Mt. Rainier was rumbling and smoking here in Seattle, I think I would leave the Area until it stopped or sell my house while I could to someone not leaving yet. You never know, Mammoth Mountain, long thought extinct, might have fresh magma going up it’s pipes in store. So if you can , take some time off, maybe fly?

    Here is what I have been pasting about on various comment sections. Perhaps the conversation is widening……….
    As if being long overdue is not bad enough, Global warming amplifies Earthquakes size and frequency , heres how; When pollution changes the composition of the air making it a bigger blanket covering the Earth, it slows down how fast heat from the core can radiate off the surface of the Earth. Much like if you covered a hot car hood with a blanket, the cooling system has to work faster. In the Earth’s case it melts more rock which carries the heat up to the surface and gives it off to the air. This makes more volcanoes, plate movement and Earthquakes. The atmosphere is like the insulation in the walls of your home, how thick it is affects how it is inside as well as makes the furnace hotter too. Fortunately the Earth has heat pump cooling system that uses water as it’s planetary refrigerant. It can carry the heat on the surface to the upper atmosphere where the heat is dropped off and then the super cold water comes back down to the surface bring more cooling too boot.

    So take care, stay safe and be aware of your surrounding, Good LUCK!

  • Susan-Loyd
    Reply

    Thank you for another interesting FOTW. There was something interesting maybe an hour or so before the earthquakes. The first one I was at work at the hospital in Fountain Valley CA. A few nurses and myself all had headaches and a little nausea ( we thought it was from all the food and potluck we had ) But it happened again yesterday I had a headache and a little nausea along with three other nurses . ( nothing horrible just headaches and nauseous and dizziness.) by the time I got home we had the earthquake . ( I am from orange county California . Never felt like that before.) Just interesting . Thank you again . Have a wonderful weekend .

    • Johnathan Jones
      Reply

      Magnetic field strength is measured in units known as the Gauss. Do you remember hitting the de-gauss Button on the old time CRT computer displays before LCD made them obsolete , heavy electricity guzzlers that would sunburn your retinas and make you feel sick if you spent to much time in front of them? IU think you may have a similar sensitivity maybe based of hospital location, rocks underneath and or wires and pipes running to and from the hospital . The piezo electric property is commonly found in rocks in various strength levels. Like in a lighter that makes a spark when you click it, a spring drives metal into a rock and the mechanical force excites the mineral structure of the rock and electricity is generated. So just before the Earthquakes you may have been in a standing wave field that was making you feel ill and then when the pressure was released by the earthquake rupturing, you then felt better as the field was gone, back to “normal” pressure on the rock.

    • S0Robert
      Reply

      Hi, interesting. I noticed something similar regarding the dizziness, but I found my self to be in the eye of a very powerful low pressure cell in the northern hemisphere. On the summer solar solstice last year 2018 in Vasa, Finland, I was at home in the center of the low pressure cell and not one leaf was moving, and just a couple of km away they had the one of the worst storm in a long time. At that point I felt very dizzy and nauseous, I had to go to sleep for two hours because I almost fell a sleep standing on my yard.

      Br

  • epeeb1
    Reply

    People get spooked and worked up with the overflow of misinformation thrown at them by the ever increasing media of today,,,and the truth is no-one really can tell the Future like the Gypsies at the Calgary Stampede !

  • Messenger
    Reply

    I consider this to be a dry run of the Big One. It’s not a question of IF but a question of WHEN and wherever you are… how it will affect you. Watch the phi angle shift, watch coronal holes, pay attention to where earthquakes are occurring and how big they are. Watch the weather systems near you. Basically, pay attention and react on the side of caution. Plan ahead. Your preparation is the key to your survival. As Ben says… “eyes open… no fear… be safe everyone”.

  • Uncleharley
    Reply

    I

  • silversteve
    Reply

    I live on the Kenai Peninsula in Alaska. Earthquakes and Volcanos are a constant reality. If a person lives in these types of areas they take their chances. Best to be prepared no matter where you live. If i lived in Kansas I would certainly have a tornado shelter.
    The bottom line is, there is no place safe from everything.

  • michael.dick
    Reply

    If you are relying upon the USGS for your earthquake data, to update the disaster prediction app, then I would start finding a way to attain that information independent of this organization. The USGS obviously (in my eyes) is part of the problem.

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