Friday, May 21, 2010
Ocean floor near Australia is rising 13 feet per day?
Thanks to Krsanna for this.
The ocean floor near Australia is rising 13 feet per day? The June 26 lunar eclipse will be focused on this area. The July 11 solar eclipse will be visible from this area. That's two eclipses associated with the area.
It is in the general region of the Asian megaquake in 2004, which has been followed by a series of very, very large quakes in the last year. It is south of a buried tectonic plate off the tip of India that is predicted to one day result in a new island. "Radar crop circles" that Colin Andrew mentioned was followed by an earthquake in Australia in an area that has few quakes. The area between Indonesia and Australia is one to watch.
Sunspots surged to a new high for this maximum in early May then declined to zero for 12 days. Today, May 21, magnetic fields burst through the surface of the sun to form a new sunspot. "The sunspot's dark core is growing rapidly, more than doubling in size since the day (May 21st) began. It does not yet pose a threat for significant solar flares, but if its growth proceeds apace, the sunspot could be a source of eruptions during the weekend. The emergence of this not-yet-numbered active region breaks a string of 12 days without sunspots." http://www.spaceweather.com
Regards,
Krsanna
Ocean floor near Australia is rising 13 feet per day?
Thanks to Krsanna for this.
The ocean floor near Australia is rising 13 feet per day? The June 26 lunar eclipse will be focused on this area. The July 11 solar eclipse will be visible from this area. That's two eclipses associated with the area.
It is in the general region of the Asian megaquake in 2004, which has been followed by a series of very, very large quakes in the last year. It is south of a buried tectonic plate off the tip of India that is predicted to one day result in a new island. "Radar crop circles" that Colin Andrew mentioned was followed by an earthquake in Australia in an area that has few quakes. The area between Indonesia and Australia is one to watch.
Sunspots surged to a new high for this maximum in early May then declined to zero for 12 days. Today, May 21, magnetic fields burst through the surface of the sun to form a new sunspot. "The sunspot's dark core is growing rapidly, more than doubling in size since the day (May 21st) began. It does not yet pose a threat for significant solar flares, but if its growth proceeds apace, the sunspot could be a source of eruptions during the weekend. The emergence of this not-yet-numbered active region breaks a string of 12 days without sunspots." http://www.spaceweather.com
Regards,
Krsanna