[TimeStar] Get ready for the really big show

Bill Hamilton skycom22 at skywatch-research.org
Wed Jan 12 11:28:22 EST 2005


I was watching NBC world news last night when Brian Williams asked, in the face of so many natural disasters, is the
earth trying to send us a message?  I knew when they started the interviews with scientists that only PC answers
would be given -- "all these events are unrelated" ; "just normal", and no mention of globar warming.

Here is what was actually said,
Is something wrong with Mother Earth?
A quest for answers to explain the world's recent volatility

By Kerry Sanders
Correspondent
NBC News
Updated: 7:33 p.m. ET Jan. 11, 2005


>From space, Mother Earth is seemingly tranquil - the proverbial "big blue marble." But up close it looks like our more than 4 billion-year-old planet is having trouble.

Consider the recent evidence:

a.. The violent Indian Ocean earthquake and the resulting tsunami that left parts of 11 nations devastated. 
a.. November's powerful 6.2 earthquake in Costa Rica that killed eight people. 
a.. Three volcanoes in Guatemala all simultaneously active for the first time in 31 years.  
Should we be worried?

"The world is not coming to an end," says NASA scientist Dr. David Adamec. "Things are fine."

Adamec studies the Earth and says there is no scientific data to suggest all this violence from the Earth, at the same time, is unusual.

"The planet is alive," he says. "We have a hot core and every once in a while there are weak zones in the crust and we see things like volcanoes and earthquakes happen along those things. It's just a normal part of what a planet does."

But wait a minute - what about all the wicked weather?

Floods are happening everywhere: from western England - the worst in 40 years - to Estonia, Finland and Ohio. Then there's the so-called "pineapple express" battering the Western United States.  Is it the result of another warm Pacific Ocean El Niño event?

"The effect of El Niño on this particular weather pattern is hard to find," says Russell Pfost, a meteorologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.


So, back to those earthquake and volcanoes.  What effect have they had on the weather?

"There's no causal relationship there at all," says University of South Florida professor Dr. Chuck Connor. "The current bad, bad weather we've been having - it's not influenced by volcanoes or earthquakes."

The earthquake that created the tsunami did cause a shift in the earth's axis, and the North Pole actually moved one inch to the east, yet U.S. experts say there's no evidence it affected the weather.

© 2005 MSNBC Interactive
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6814322/

 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: TimeStar 
  To: TimeStar Forecasts and Announcements 
  Sent: Tuesday, January 11, 2005 9:04 PM
  Subject: [TimeStar] Get ready for the really big show


  With 911 conspiracy theories expressed, it's time to look at the really big show coming up with Planet Earth.  This show makes 911 look like a small stuff.  The tsunami in Asia caused by a 9.0 magnitude quake in Sumatra on December 26, 2004 is a sample of what could happen on the east coast of the Americas (North and South).  

  The Teide volcano in the Canary Islands is showing signs of unrest this week (January 11).  The Canary Islands, which are sinking in the Atlantic are one of the locations that TimeStar forecast specified could cause catastrophic damage to the east coast of the Americas (North and South) and could be active in January and February.  

  A large eruption began at Mt Popo in Mexico on January.  Mexico and Central America are other locations TimeStar specified for activity in January and February.  

  TimeStar specified that Sumatra is a key point of earth changes in 1998 and, further, forecasts that major changes are yet to come from that part of the world.  

  The TimeStar glyphs (pointers) had been on Indonesia and India during December when the Sumatra quake finally broke loose, while the location had been identified in 1998.  TimeStar named the east coast of the Americas on the axis with Sumatra that will be key points of earthquakes and volcanoes.  The precise date of a catastrophic event on the east coast is not yet clear, but it is only a matter of time.  

  An article about volcanic tsunamis, which are tsunamis caused by volcanoes, is at the following link.  http://www.volcanolive.com/tsunami10.html

  Krsanna

  http://www.volcanolive.com/volcanolive.html
  Teide Volcano (Canary Islands) 
  28.27 N, 16.64 W, summit elevation 3715 m, stratovolcano 
  Tuesday 11th January 2005 
  A report has been received of an increase in unrest at Tiede volcano in the Canary Islands over the past 2 weeks. Carbon dioxide emissions have risen from 75 to 354 tons per day. Hydrogen sulphide emissions have risen from 35 to 152 tons per day. Seismic activity remains elevated under the volcano. Fumaroles have increased in their pressure, and now emit sounds. There is no significant deformation of the land observed. 
  More on Teide volcano... 

  Popocatepetl Volcano (Mexico) 
  19.023 N, 98.622 W, summit elevation 5426 m, stratovolcano 
  Tuesday 11th January 2005 
  A large eruption occurred at Popocatepetl volcano on 9th January at 16:47 hours. Ash emission reached 5 km above the crater, followed by ashfall in surrounding towns. The intense phase of the eruption lasted 15 minutes and was followed by high frequency tremor. After the erruption Popocatepetl returned to its previous level of activity which consisted of low intensity emissions of steam, gas and occasionally small amounts of ash. The traffic light of volcanic alert is in YELLOW-1. Access is restricted in a radius of 12 km from the crater.  
  More on Popocatepetl volcano... 



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