krsanna
24th August 2011, 23:19
Weird reports continue to come from Japan about the Fukushima nuclear plant disaster while quake activity increases worldwide near the latitude of Japan’s megaquake on March 11. A 3-degree range on either side of the megaquake’s latitude (where earthquakes continue to shake Japan) results in a band of 35.22 North to 41.22 North, which I’ll call the Fukushima band for simplicity. The number of quakes in this band worldwide is extraordinary. We have no idea what kind of technological intervention was attempted to remedy the nuclear problem in Japan – HAARP, chemtrails, and other technologies may have been used that exacerbated the situation.
Anybody can look at the map and see the extremely large number of quakes in the Fukushima band. This band of activity is NOT related to TimeStar cycles. TimeStar did, in fact, forecast peak levels of activity in the Pacific during March, as an eclipse cycle ended (260 days) on March 12, but nuclear and other technologies involved, clearly, are not natural cyclic events.
http://www.timestar.org/maps/8-24-11quakes.JPG
The primary TimeStar cycle at present is in the Atlantic and Caribbean and affects both the eastern USA and western Europe through September. The TimeStar glyph is noted with a yellow star on the map above. (It’s not about comets, folks. It’s about a cycle forecast before Comet Elenin was announced, although the comet could affect the planet’s electrical systems if it gets too close.)
The secondary TimeStar cycle is presently in the Indian Ocean positioned over Indonesia. This is noted with a red star on the map. As a rule, a second TimeStar cycle will build up slowly, and I rarely mention secondary factors for the sake of simplicity. Generally, the secondary TimeStar cycle would gain momentum in December, but this one looks like it will be more powerful sooner. It will move onto Fukushima’s latitude band in September, and the highly sensitized area could get more active in September than it is right now. The secondary TimeStar cycle will influence Turkey in September, and Turkey is equal and opposite the location of the megaquake in Japan. Energy effects in Turkey could then transfer along the Syrian-African trench at the same time the Atlantic is highly active.
The location of the bulge I posted about a week ago is noted on the map. An active Atlantic with secondary transfer of energy from Africa could get wild, but this is not a certainty. It’s about a 70% probability. Conceivably, activity from the bulge, which could be a “rupture” of some kind, could move to South America and/or Australia and Indonesia.
Renewed activity at extinct volcanoes in recent months indicates deep change within ancient geological formations has come into play. Once-extinct features affected by the meteor impact (which theoretically killed the dinosaurs) 65 million years ago may be roaring back to life.
The meteor impact was severe. It threw the entire planet for a loop. It was not a polite impact where the meteor took its time looking for a parking spot in the Gulf of Mexico after giving a right-hand turn signal as it left the Asteroid Belt*. It ferociously slammed into the planet and very likely changed the planet’s tilt and rotation on its axis, at a time when the west coast of the America’s had already formed. The shock wave from the impact would have been capable of slamming tectonic plates together and creating fault lines, and I suspect much geological catastrophe on America’s west coast resulted from shock waves. Depending on the angle of the impact and subsequent shock waves, what is now Japan could have been affected by the meteor’s impact. Tsunamis could have inundated the planet to kill the dinosaurs. This is a hypothesis based, in part, on land masses that had been formed at the time of the impact and those subsequently formed in the eastern Gulf of Mexico.
I believe the builders of Teotihuacan considered geological conditions of this kind when selecting the site to build the first pyramid center in North America. The information is embedded in glyphs from pyramid sites most closely associated with Teotihuacan.
http://www.timestar.org/maps/na65myr.jpg
*Israeli scientists theorize that solar activity 65 million years ago at the time of the meteor impact was extremely high. This simultaneously reduced the earth’s magnetic shield against incoming meteors and served to dislodge objects from the Asteroid Belt as a result of heating.
New age for the moon: http://blogs.nature.com/news/2011/08/making_the_moon.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+news%2Frss%2Fthe_great_beyond+%28Nature+News+Blog+-+Blog+Posts%29&WT.mc_id=TWT_NatureNews
Anybody can look at the map and see the extremely large number of quakes in the Fukushima band. This band of activity is NOT related to TimeStar cycles. TimeStar did, in fact, forecast peak levels of activity in the Pacific during March, as an eclipse cycle ended (260 days) on March 12, but nuclear and other technologies involved, clearly, are not natural cyclic events.
http://www.timestar.org/maps/8-24-11quakes.JPG
The primary TimeStar cycle at present is in the Atlantic and Caribbean and affects both the eastern USA and western Europe through September. The TimeStar glyph is noted with a yellow star on the map above. (It’s not about comets, folks. It’s about a cycle forecast before Comet Elenin was announced, although the comet could affect the planet’s electrical systems if it gets too close.)
The secondary TimeStar cycle is presently in the Indian Ocean positioned over Indonesia. This is noted with a red star on the map. As a rule, a second TimeStar cycle will build up slowly, and I rarely mention secondary factors for the sake of simplicity. Generally, the secondary TimeStar cycle would gain momentum in December, but this one looks like it will be more powerful sooner. It will move onto Fukushima’s latitude band in September, and the highly sensitized area could get more active in September than it is right now. The secondary TimeStar cycle will influence Turkey in September, and Turkey is equal and opposite the location of the megaquake in Japan. Energy effects in Turkey could then transfer along the Syrian-African trench at the same time the Atlantic is highly active.
The location of the bulge I posted about a week ago is noted on the map. An active Atlantic with secondary transfer of energy from Africa could get wild, but this is not a certainty. It’s about a 70% probability. Conceivably, activity from the bulge, which could be a “rupture” of some kind, could move to South America and/or Australia and Indonesia.
Renewed activity at extinct volcanoes in recent months indicates deep change within ancient geological formations has come into play. Once-extinct features affected by the meteor impact (which theoretically killed the dinosaurs) 65 million years ago may be roaring back to life.
The meteor impact was severe. It threw the entire planet for a loop. It was not a polite impact where the meteor took its time looking for a parking spot in the Gulf of Mexico after giving a right-hand turn signal as it left the Asteroid Belt*. It ferociously slammed into the planet and very likely changed the planet’s tilt and rotation on its axis, at a time when the west coast of the America’s had already formed. The shock wave from the impact would have been capable of slamming tectonic plates together and creating fault lines, and I suspect much geological catastrophe on America’s west coast resulted from shock waves. Depending on the angle of the impact and subsequent shock waves, what is now Japan could have been affected by the meteor’s impact. Tsunamis could have inundated the planet to kill the dinosaurs. This is a hypothesis based, in part, on land masses that had been formed at the time of the impact and those subsequently formed in the eastern Gulf of Mexico.
I believe the builders of Teotihuacan considered geological conditions of this kind when selecting the site to build the first pyramid center in North America. The information is embedded in glyphs from pyramid sites most closely associated with Teotihuacan.
http://www.timestar.org/maps/na65myr.jpg
*Israeli scientists theorize that solar activity 65 million years ago at the time of the meteor impact was extremely high. This simultaneously reduced the earth’s magnetic shield against incoming meteors and served to dislodge objects from the Asteroid Belt as a result of heating.
New age for the moon: http://blogs.nature.com/news/2011/08/making_the_moon.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+news%2Frss%2Fthe_great_beyond+%28Nature+News+Blog+-+Blog+Posts%29&WT.mc_id=TWT_NatureNews