Planetary tremor: the anomalistic 2100 hour event

 

February 3, 2011Above: (left) Pitcairn Island seismic wave anomaly – (right) New Zealand.  Another planetary tremor occurred at 21:00 hours GMT. What’s notable about the latest planetary seismic event is that it’s one of the oddest we’ve seen. Trouble is once again developing in the South Pacific region. The 4.5 magnitude quake on the South Island of New Zealand and the 5.4 earthquake which struck the volcanic region of Tonga is testament to continual South Pacific unrest. The global seismic pattern also shows what looks like a massive Pacific Plate obstruction in subduction to the Indo-Australian plate. We think the seismic vibrations from this event rattled tectonic plates across the globe. Areas of most prominence include Samoa, followed by an oscillating wave under Pitcairn Island, South Pacific and a sizable jolt near the Kermandec Islands and Tonga.
  
(left) Chile anomaly and (right) Kermandec Islands. The trembling was seen through Norway and can also be seen in the recent flurry of 3.0 magnitude tremors to rattle the MAR running through Iceland. Pulse tremors followed across Chile and Brazil and rippled to Antarctica.  All this could be leading to another major mega-thrust quake. Below, Iceland tremors and the unsual bow oscillating wave in the magnetosphere of a planet shaken during rotation and magnetic field propagation. 

  

This entry was posted in Earth Changes, Extinction Protocol Exclusive Editorial, Planetary Tremor Event, Signs of Magnetic Field weakening. Bookmark the permalink.

2 Responses to Planetary tremor: the anomalistic 2100 hour event

  1. arleigh crisman says:

    Can these quakes create enough of a harmonic influence to trigger other potential weaknesses in the plates, like 2 tuning forks ?

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