Anonymous ID: 8bbc6f Aug. 31, 2023, 5:55 a.m. No.19465412   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5422 >>5459 >>5496

Anons remember this?For some reason it seems important now. I don’t know but I’ve been thinking about it for the past few days. Does anyone have any explanation because scientists are still baffled by it? Q says related to SAT and what does he mean “There is a place for everyone? Did they unblock signals that divided or blocked people from the great awakening? Has anything occurred like this recently?

 

An unexplained seismic event ‘rang’ across the Earth in November

 2527

02-Dec-2018 4:26:57 PM EST

8ch/qresearch

>>4117309

Think WAVES!

WW?

Define 'unified'

[17]

SAT knockout forced new CLAS tech [online] by who?

[Controlled] moment activated? [17]

Do you believe in coincidences?

Do you believe your efforts here persuade people to stop the pursuit of TRUTH, [CA_J]?

There is a place for everyone.

Q

 

An unexplained seismic event ‘rang’ across the Earth in November

It has experts baffled.

Robby BermanNovember 29, 2018

Someone who tracks earthquakes for fun noticed it first. On November 11, 2018, a Twitter user going by @matarikipax spotted a weird signal on the U.S Geological Survey’s live seismogram page.

What’s so weird about the mystery rumble?

While Mayotte has experienced hundreds of tremors since last May, the strongest, a 5.8 quake, occurred on May 15 and since then they’ve been tapering off in recent months. And there’s been no seismic activity that corresponds to the November wave. Still, the seismology community suspects it’s somehow related to the recent activity off Mayotte.

 

Normally, earthquakes produce “wave trains” comprised of high-frequency P (for “Primary”) waves that travel in pulses, as well as mid-frequency S (for “Secondary”) waves that wiggle side-to-side. Slow, low-frequency waves such as the mystery rumble are generally produced at the tail end of intense earthquakes, but again, there hasn’t been one anywhere in the right time frame that we know of.

 

Also, and just as “odd,” is that the wave is monochromatic. Most waves contain a cluster of waves at different speeds, or frequencies, that make for a fuzzy, complicated burst of a waveshape on monitoring equipment. The November wave was comprised of just a single frequency, and appeared as an unusually simple, clean zig-zag of about 17 seconds in length. Helen Robinson at the University of Glasgow, mischievously suggests to National Geographic, “They’re too nice; they’re too perfect to be nature.” It could be surrounding rock is filtering out other waves. Supporting this possibility is that, when the lowest frequencies are filtered out of the waveform, noise appears that could be faint P and S signals are seen. Independent seismologist Anthony Lomax tweeted the following image.

 

Almost exactly half a year before this strange signal turned up, seismologists were surprised by another kind of abnormal seismic activity in the same vicinity: a swarm of hundreds of small and frequent earthquakes originating about 50 kilometres (31 miles) off the east coast of Mayotte.

 

https://bigthink.com/hard-science/mystery-seismic-wave/