Animal Behavior, Methane Poisoning, Dead or Alive and on the move (+ interactive map)

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When Planet X entered the inner Solar System in late 2002 - early 2003, it was not just the Earth that reacted, as it did with an increase in earthquakes, volcanism and extreme weather, the animal life on Earth also started showing signs of the approaching monster.

The most noticeable symptoms were:

  • Crazy Animal Behaviour:  Reports of bizarre behaviour including animal attacks from normally passive creatures and spiders spinning webs over whole fields.
  • Confused Animals:  Whales and dolphins stranding themselves on beaches in droves or getting lost upstream in coastal rivers.
  • Large fish and bird kills:  Flocks of birds falling dead from the sky and shoals of fish dying and floating to the surface of lakes, rivers and washing up along coastlines.

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Crazy Animal Behaviour

Reports of crazy animal behaviour have included sheep that charged a farmer’s wife off a cliff, deer attacking a car and rabbits biting pedestrians.  Spiders have spun webs over whole fields and caterpillar larvae have covered whole trees in silk.

As usual, the Zetas explain the true causes:

http://www.zetatalk.com/transfor/t154.htm (Jan 11th 2003)

Animal behavior also has been noted as almost crazed, where animals normally passive and seeking to avoid confrontation will attack with provocation, or fly in the wrong direction during migration. This is due to signals the animals or insects get from the core of the Earth, signals not known to man, but nonetheless there.  [……]  Spiders weaving webs to an extreme so that acres are covered under webs, get noted, but the base behavior is normal for a spider.  EOZT

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Confused Animals

Other erratic behaviour among animals included a seeming loss of direction with whales and dolphins swimming inland and stranding themselves on beaches.

Unreliable Compasses  (March 28th, 2009)

The compass is unreliable for the past few years, and lately has gotten very extreme in its variance. Many animals and insects have a biological compass, recording during migrations where that compass laid, and when taking a return trip relying on the recording to guide them back. If the Earth's N Pole swings away from the press of Planet X, which is increasingly pointing its N Pole at the Earth, then these animals are not given correct clues and aim for land or up a river. Sad to say, this will only get worse as the last weeks and the pole shift loom on the horizon.   EOZT

Are due to the Magnetic Clash   (July 1st, 2006)

The compass anomaly, swinging to the East, is indicative of the Earth adjusting to the approach of Planet X and the clash of their magnetic fields. The change is indicative of a clash in magnetic fields as Planet X comes ever closer to the Earth, their fields touching. It is the combined field that Earth must adjust to, and continue to adjust to, not the exact position of the N Pole of Planet X within these fields, and the Sun's magnetic field enters into the equation too. This dramatic change, noted by a conscientious tracker, checking dual compasses daily for years, indicates that the Earth is trying to align side-by-side with Planet X, bringing its magnetic N Pole to point toward the Sun, as Planet X is currently doing in the main. These adjustments are temporary, and change about, as magnets can make dramatic and swift changes in their alignment with each other. Put a number of small magnets on a glass, with iron ore dust, and move a large magnet about under them, and watch the jerking about they do. Are we saying the Earth's magnetic field is going to get more erratic in the future, dramatically so? There is no question that this will be one of the signs that will come, yet another not covered by the Global Warming excuse.   EOZT

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Large fish and bird kills

Hundreds, if not thousands, of these events have taken place with the frequency increasing year on year.  Poignant examples include the 20 tonnes of dead herring which washed ashore in Norway and 1200 pelicans found on a beach in Peru.

Earth Farts  (January 9th, 2007)

We have explained, in great detail, that the stretch zone does not register great quakes when rock layers pull apart and sink, as this is a silent Earth change. Nancy has carefully documented breaking water and gas mains, derailing trains, dislocating bridge abutments, mining accidents, and outbreaks of factory explosions, showing that these have occurred in rashes on occasion, when the rock layers pulled apart. [……]  In September-October of 2005, a smell of rotten eggs was sensed from LA to Thunder Bay on Lake Superior to the New England states and throughout the South-Eastern US. We explained at that time that this was due to rock layers being pulled apart, releasing gas from moldering vegetation trapped during prior pole shifts, when rock layers were jerked about, trapping vegetation. We explained in March of 2002 that black water off the coast of Florida was caused by this phenomena. Do these fumes cause people to sicken, and birds to die? Mining operations of old had what they called the canary in a birdcage, to warn the miners of methane gas leaks. Birds are very sensitive to these fumes, and die, and this is indeed what happened in Austin, TX. Were it not for the explosions associated with gas leaks, it would be common knowledge that gas leaks sicken, as the body was not structured to breathe such air for long.   EOZT

 

Zetatalk Explanation  (January 8th, 2011)

Dead fish and birds falling from the sky are being reported worldwide, suddenly. This is not a local affair, obviously. Dead birds have been reported in Sweden and N America, and dead fish in N America, Brazil, and New Zealand. Methane is known to cause bird dead, and as methane rises when released during Earth shifting, will float upward through the flocks of birds above. But can this be the cause of dead fish? If birds are more sensitive than humans to methane release, fish are likewise sensitive to changes in the water, as anyone with an aquarium will attest. Those schools of fish caught in rising methane bubbles during sifting of rock layers beneath them will inevitably be affected. Fish cannot, for instance, hold their breath until the emergency passes! Nor do birds have such a mechanism.   EOZT

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Comment by bill on January 23, 2012 at 2:19am

Whales stranded in Golden Bay

 

Whales stranded in Golden Bay

A pod of pilot whales has stranded on Farewell Spit in Golden Bay.

The Department of Conservation says around 90 whales stranded at low tide today.

Staff members and volunteers are now assembling to go out to the spit in an attempted to refloat them.

Earlier this month, eighteen pilot whales were successfully refloated after 25 stranded on the spit

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on January 23, 2012 at 1:57am

A really interesting article about how the animal population has thrived most prominently the wolves in radiation wracked Chernobyl.  Vegetation and animals have no problem thriving post human, even in the face of radiation poisoning.

http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/11348898-radioactive-wolv...

Radioactive wolves occupy vacated homes

Kiev : Ukraine | Jan 21, 2012 at 8:34 PM PST

Chernobyl reclaimed by wolves and other animals after humans vacated their homes - utube video.

Speaking of health, it took a nuclear reactor accident to bring the animal, especially the thriving wolf population back to Chernobyl. Should the US take note of what happens to an area when that place is deserted by humans due to an accident?

Check out the excellent PBS video, Radioactive wolves. And see the Radioactive Wolves Homepage. Also check out the uTube videos, Chernobyl Reclaimed: An Animal Takeover (1 of 5).

What happens to nature after a nuclear accident? And how does wildlife deal with the world it inherits after human inhabitants have fled? People looking for healthier environments such as wildlife parks to explore, can take a lesson just by looking at how the animals reclaimed the city when the people left.

What happened is that back in 1986 the world witnessed a nuclear meltdown at the infamous Chernobyl power plant in present-day Ukraine. The accident left miles of land in radioactive ruins.

The first animals to take over were the bison herds and then the wolves....So that the land began to look as it did just after the end of the last ice age. Residents living in areas most contaminated by the disaster were evacuated and relocated by government order.

Today, there's a no-man’s land human making that is now left to its own devices. That land will be radioactive for thousands of years. But has it changed the animal life? Not in many measurable ways, so far, say scientists. The wolves are healthy, at least for now, and so are the other animals--eagles, bison, horses, beavers, various birds, moose, and other animals looking much as they did before humans plowed the land.

In the ensuing 25 years, forests, marshes, fields and rivers reclaimed the land, reversing the effects of hundreds of years of human development, according to the Radioactive Wolves blog page.

For the animals, this radiation-wracked exclusion zone, or “dead zone,” has become a kind of post-nuclear wolf Eden, populated by beaver and bison, horses and birds, fish and falcons – and ruled by wolves.

Looks like wolves are kings in that land, in spite of the cold winters between Belarus and the Ukraine. The Belarus side is where the no-radio zone lies and the Ukraine side is radioactive. The wolves cross back and forth between the rivers that separate the two nations.

Access to the radioactive zone is now permitted, at least on a limit

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on January 23, 2012 at 1:45am

http://onionlive.com/2012/01/15/dead-fishes-at-yamuna-shock-pilgrims/

Dead fishes at Yamuna shock pilgrims

Agra: Scores of devotees who had gone to worship river Yamuna here early Saturday morning were shocked at the sight of thousands of dead fish near the Balkeshwar Ghat, activists said.Alarm bells were ringing by afternoon and the Agra Water Works had to increase the quantity of chemicals to treat the polluted water.

Heaps of dead fish were also noticed at village Narhauli near Farah in Mathura district.The quality of water in the river deteriorated after abrupt discharge from the Gokul barrage, which raised the water level in Agra by a foot Friday.

“The water stored at Gokul barrage is all industrial effluents and sewer waste flowing down from upstream cities and industrial clusters of Faridabad and Ballabhgarh. Even bacterias cant survive in this polluted water,” said activist Shravan Kumar Singh of the Yamuna Foundation for Blue Water. Surendra Sharma, president of the Braj Mandal Heritage Conservation Society, said: “Every year there are incidents of fish deaths and still the authorities are not waking up to the threat.”

Comment by bill on January 21, 2012 at 4:57am

Whales beached at Papamoa

Four beaked whales were beached at Papamoa Beach. Photo / Richard Moore

Four beaked whales were beached at Papamoa Beach. Photo / Richard Moore

Department of Conservation workers and Project Jonah were called to Papamoa Beach East in Tauranga this morning where four whales, believed to have been Beaked whales, had stranded themselves ashore.

By the time crews had arrived the whales had already died, prompting a necropsy to determine as much information about the whales and why they had stranded.

The procedure should also establish if the deaths were at all related to Rena oil contamination

Comment by Howard on January 21, 2012 at 4:57am

This ribbon seal is only the second of its kind (on record) to make the journey so far south from its traditional range in the frigid waters off Alaska and Russia.  In 1962, a ribbon seal showed up on a beach near Morro Bay, Calif., a town about 200 miles (320 kilometers) north of Los Angeles.  Source

Comment by bill on January 21, 2012 at 4:50am
Comment by julia wall on January 19, 2012 at 5:29pm

Australia shark attack on surfer is third this year

A Great White Shark [file image]

An Australian man has been seriously wounded in a shark attack off the country's west coast, in the third such incident this month.

Police said the 26-year-old man was swimming off Coral Bay beach when a 10ft (3m) tiger shark bit his arm.

The attack came one day after a surfer was seriously injured in a shark attack north of Sydney.

Shark attacks in Australia average about three a year, and this month's spate of incidents is unusual.

Medics say the injuries of the man attacked on Thursday are not life-threatening and his condition is stable.

In Wednesday's attack, the man was set upon near Newcastle, 125km (80 miles) from Sydney. Witnesses believe a great white or bull shark was involved.

On 4 January, another surfer survived a shark attack in the city of Gosford, north of Sydney.

In October, a great white shark killed a US diver in what was thought to be the second fatal shark attack in Western Australia in 12 days.

Shark attacks in Australia have caused 27 deaths in the last 22 years.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-16632606

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on January 18, 2012 at 8:44pm

A human story of methane, potentially explosive situation.  They think it was caused by hydraulic drilling but it is the Big Bad Bully, Planet X breaking ripping and crunching  things up.

http://medinagazette.northcoastnow.com/2012/01/18/feds-say-2-state-...

GRANGER TWP. — In 2001, Mark and Sandy Mangan built their dream home on State Road.

More than 10 years later, that dream home is now a potentially explosive nightmare, and Mark Mangan said he believes hydraulic oil and gas drilling in the area is to blame.

Granger Township residents Mark Mangan, left, and Bill Boggs show the contamination in their well water they said was caused by hydraulic drilling in the area. Explosive levels of natural gas have been measured at wellheads behind their State Road homes.

Last month, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services determined the Mangans’ home and the home of neighbors Bill and Stephanie Boggs pose a public health hazard because of methane gas in the water lines.

“We’re living in a bomb,” said Mangan, a volunteer firefighter.

According to a letter from the department to the Environmental Protection Agency, the Granger Fire Department investigated an odor of natural gas coming from the wellhead behind the Mangans’ home in November.

The area was measured for oxygen levels and the level of explosivity, referred to as an LEL level. According to the letter, an area is considered hazardous if the level of explosivity is above 10 percent at the surface of the wellhead.

The well behind the Mangans’ home was reading 47.4 percent, and the well behind the Boggs’ home was 34.7 percent, according to the documents.

“The high LEL levels at the wellhead suggest that significant levels of explosive gases could be released during periods of water use and the accumulation of gases in the indoor air,” the document said, adding the conditions “pose a public health hazard.”

Less than a mile from the homes are two vertically drilled natural gas wells in Allardale Park.

Medina County Park Director Tom James said the wells were installed in 2008, but it was not the county’s decision to move forward with the project. He said the Allard family donated the land to the county on the condition that already signed leases for drilling would be upheld.

The issue of hydraulic drilling, known as fracking, has caused controversy in Medina County and throughout the nation as companies look to tap into potential oil and natural gas in the Utica and Marcellus shales about 6,000 feet underground.

Hydraulic fracturing involves injecting water, particles and chemicals underground at high pressure to break up shale and release natural gas.

When asked about a possible connection between the two wells and the health hazards of two township homes, the Ohio Department of Natural Resources provided an email response that said the wells were investigated extensively and there is no connection.

A third, abandoned well across the street from the Mangans’ house, however, may be to blame, according to the ODNR.

Mark Mangan said the abandoned well was sealed in 1966, but he believes a builder cracked the top of it when a house was built in the area in the 1970s, causing gas to leak from the well. A diversion pipe was installed to ensure the gas did not pose a threat, he said.

“That’s what they’re saying is leaking into our wells, but we’ve been here since 2001 and never had that problem until the day they drilled the (Allardal

Comment by Derrick Johnson on January 18, 2012 at 7:37am

Hi syarif nur arief

Here is ZetaTalk about animals and insects  acting strange or off course due to the influence of Planet X

http://www.zetatalk.com/transfor/t154.htm

http://www.zetatalk.com/transfor/t71.htm

http://www.zetatalk.com/index/zeta503.htm

The compass is unreliable for the past few years, and lately has gotten very extreme in its variance. Many animals and insects have a biological compass, recording during migrations where that compass laid, and when taking a return trip relying on the recording to guide them back. If the Earth's N Pole swings away from the press of Planet X, which is increasingly pointing its N Pole at the Earth, then these animals are not given correct clues and aim for land or up a river. Sad to say, this will only get worse as the last weeks and the pole shift loom on the horizon.

Comment by bill on January 17, 2012 at 6:43am

53 dead fur seals wash up on Australian beach

A baby fur seal walks along a beach on the Otago peninsula near Dunedin in 2011. More than 50 dead New Zealand fur seals have been found washed up on a beach in South Australia in unexplained circumstances, environmental officials said on Tuesday.

ADELAIDE, Australia (AFP) - More than 50 dead New Zealand fur seals have been found washed up on a beach in South Australia in unexplained circumstances, environmental officials said on Tuesday.

The discovery was made on Sunday in the remote Lincoln National Park with three of the seals taken to the University of Adelaide where post-mortem examinations were to be carried out Tuesday.

The South Australia Department of Environment and Natural Resources said 51 of the protected species were juveniles and two were considered young adults.

"There's no indication of foul play. Our people said they could have been dead for up to a week," a department spokesman told AFP.

"Because of the large number it's a concern and we hope to learn more from the post-mortems."

New Zealand fur seals, generally considered docile, are found along Australia's southern coast and the coast of New Zealand's South Island.

The spokesman said there were some rocky outcrops off the Lincoln National Park coast that the seals used for breeding.

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