[Rockhounds] Rock and Roll!!!
Axel Emmermann
axel.emmermann at pandora.be
Mon Apr 21 03:13:07 PDT 2008
Which is a result of clouds of P-holes racing towards the surface?
Personally I believe that both the EM and the infrasound emanations are a
factor in quake-related animal behavior.
Elephants can communicate over more than 10 miles by tapping the ground
(infrasound).
People often get uneasy and agitated when the wind shifts to the East (in
Europe). For Europeans that means dry continental wind which carries much
positive ions (I was told ;-).
My clavicles and lower back (both from surgery) and every bone I ever broke
hurt when there's a sudden drop in atmospheric pressure. It can't be
explained by medical science and is often ridiculed but I can feel a storm
depression coming 48 hrs in advance.
Axel
> -----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
> Van: rockhounds-bounces at lists.drizzle.com
> [mailto:rockhounds-bounces at lists.drizzle.com] Namens Kreigh
> Tomaszewski
> Verzonden: maandag 21 april 2008 4:51
> Aan: Rockhounds at drizzle.com: A mailing list for rock and gem
> collectors
> Onderwerp: Re: [Rockhounds] Rock and Roll!!!
>
> Dr. Friedemann Freund at NASA recently summarized the
> research on animal precursors as...
>
> I have shared my interest in pre-earthquake animal behavior. My
> intuition (and papers that I have read over the years)
> tell me that
> the often reported unusual animal behavior is not
> triggered by EM
> emissions and magnetic field variations that would come
> with those
> EM emissions. Nor are they likely to be triggered by
> high electric
> fields. Instead we have good reasons to believe that
> the generation
> of positive ions at the Earth's surface is the cause
> why animals
> react in unusual ways.
>
> We are close to understanding the cause of positive ions
> produced before earthquakes so that seismic events can be
> predicted; the ion effect can be reproduced in the lab.
>
> Kreigh
>
>
>
>
> Margaret Malm wrote:
> >
> > But, do we know that high-pitched sounds are not also
> produced? Just
> > because we don't hear them doesn't mean they're not there --??
> >
> > Margaret
> >
> > > I've read that scientists insist that animals cannot possibly be
> > > more sensitive to an impending earthquake than the delicate
> > > instruments designed to detect quakes. But there continue to be
> > > reports of that happening. There are no such reports here in
> > > Hawaii, perhaps because our quakes are mostly caused by lava
> > > readjustment rather than large plate movement.
> > > I wonder if that movement might cause an extremely high-pitched
> > > sound that animals can hear rather than feel.
> > > However, I'm not a scientist!
> >
> > Hi Kitty,
> >
> > If I'm not mistaking, it's just opposite: an extremely low-pitched
> > sound or infra-sound.
> > I just saw a documentary on National Geographic High Definition
> > Channel that demonstrated that quite some animals can feel the
> > infra-sound and react to it. It's just a few hertz, apparently.
> >
> > Cheers from Belgium
> >
> > Axel
> >
> > --
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