View Full Version : a Kentucky EQ???
avid
10th November 2012, 17:47
Type: Earthquake
14 minutes ago
Magnitude: 4.3
DateTime: Saturday November 10 2012, 17:08:12 UTC
Region: eastern Kentucky
Depth: 1.1 km
Source: USGS Feed
Is there fracking there???
blufire
10th November 2012, 18:12
There is fracking all over this area. I have been documenting, photographing, taking soil and water samples for a year now. . . I am haliburton's little shadow
We have tremors all the time. But I do not feel it is due only to drilling and mining
shadowstalker
10th November 2012, 22:25
My daughter slept thru it all, course she was like miles from it on base.
thunder24
10th November 2012, 22:40
im about 70 miles southeast of there, and we felt it all over the county, very mountainous here, makes me wonder if mountains make the quakes reverberate like a bell or if they slow it down...hhhmmm
M6*
10th November 2012, 23:34
Thanks, Blufire! Keep us posted! M6*
ghostrider
11th November 2012, 16:57
Magma pushing underground, and continental bowing. One side of the plate sinks, the other rebounds , and it bows in the middle adding pressure and you have a quake even without fracking. We are gonna see these in kansas/ missouri/arkansas just to name a few. You guys should look at post glacier rebound effect, it is the source of the dynamics of all the catastrophe's . The government sealed our fate in the 1950's. nuclear testing out west. It took a few years but the puzzle is taking shape now and they cant' stop it , all they can do is build cities underground. Earthquakes , volcanoes, super storms , sonic booms, bird deaths, extreme flooding, the earth slowing, and expanding, = nuclear detonations in the 50's have caused post glacier rebound = a big door for the sun's charged particles to enter earth and do it work. I can't stress it enough, the earth is under a magma push and expanding making sinkholes and quakes because of the glacier melt adding water/weight to the ocean floor. ( louisiana bayou corne) sinking and gases coming from the ground opening up. Now Kentucky feels a quake. watch for sinkholes in that area. that fault line is under a magma push from the shifting tectonic plates that have new water/weight on them. the greenland melt in three days. hint.
Rocky_Shorz
11th November 2012, 17:02
im about 70 miles southeast of there, and we felt it all over the county, very mountainous here, makes me wonder if mountains make the quakes reverberate like a bell or if they slow it down...hhhmmm
sandy ground absorbs the shaking, rocky lands and mountains feel the effects much stronger
thunder24
11th November 2012, 20:52
im about 70 miles southeast of there, and we felt it all over the county, very mountainous here, makes me wonder if mountains make the quakes reverberate like a bell or if they slow it down...hhhmmm
sandy ground absorbs the shaking, rocky lands and mountains feel the effects much stronger
well that would make sense why we felt it so far down here..... also why toronto all the way to down here felt the one that hit virgina and cracked washington d.c.'s phallus last year...
on a sidenote its really cool to fly over the appalachians and see the running all the way up to newyork from georgia as ur flying in and out of canada....
peace
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