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 Robyn Appleton on January 23, 2013 at 10:49pm

Dead seals washed up on beach

CARCASSES BEING EXAMINED TO ESTABLISH CAUSE OF DEATHS

District Conservation Ranger Lorcan Scott with one

of the seals that washed up on Duncannon Beach last week.

THE RESULTS of a post mortem examination are being awaited to establish what caused the deaths of three seals found washed up on Duncannon Beach.

The mammals were discovered on Tuesday by the National Parks and Wildlife Service.

According to Tony Murray, Conservation Ranger for South County Wexford, prior to Christmas the National Parks and Wildlife Service were contacted by the Seal Sanctuary after seals were washed up in Waterford Harbour and also in Wexford.

Photographs were taken of the dead mammals, their carcasses were documented and a physical assessment was carried out of their remains.

On foot of these reports Tony and his colleague in Waterford have been continuously monitoring the situation.

On Tuesday Tony travelled to Duncannon Beach where he found three new seals that he hadn't seen on a previous visit.

'All were freshly dead,' explained Tony, adding that on examination they appeared to have no injuries.

' Having three dead seals on a beach is quite unusual,' he added.

Contact was made with the Department of Agriculture and one of the seals was taken to the District Veterinary Laboratory in Kilkenny on Tuesday for a post mortem examination.

The National Parks and Wildlife Service are now waiting to hear from lab as to the results of the post mortem.

Source

Comment by Nancy Lieder on January 23, 2013 at 2:45pm

New ZetaTalk on the Paris-London stretch stench!

SOZT

The question that the public should be asking, re the Rouen gas leak, is how quickly Mercaptan dilutes, over vast distances, and how it is that it could escape to London and southern England, and also to Paris, without likewise escaping to most of France? The locations suffering with headaches and nausea, signs of methane poisoning, are too localized, too distant from the supposed source, and if the concentrations were such in London and Paris then the populace in Rouen WOULD BE DEAD. Gas dilutes, evaporates and rises. Where are the explosions that would be associated with such an intense concentration of a volatile gas? This is clearly a convenient excuse, with a cooperative corporate entity willing to take a slap on the hand for maintaining the cover-up over the Earth changes being caused by the near presence of Planet X.

EOZT

Comment by Mark on January 23, 2013 at 8:09am


ANOTHER STRETCH STENCH:

The great French stench: Gas leak in Rouen leaves foul-smelling cloud of gas wafting over southern England

Authorities are blaming a leak in a chemical factory in Rouen for the foul smelling gas which has somehow managed to waft over 50 miles to Paris where it has been causing people to get ill and at the same time, also drift 150 miles in the opposite direction to London. Now that's some trick!

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/the-great-french-ste...

Comment by Howard on January 20, 2013 at 8:25pm

30+ Miles of Sarasota Beach Florida Inundated With Dead Fish (Jan 19)

Officials say winds and waves overnight Thursday pushed more dead fish onto nearly every beach in Sarasota County. Friday crews are spread across the entire coastline doing what they can to pick up the debris in what has already been a long week.

"It's a pretty big event today." Standing on Nokomis Beach Friday, Sarasota County Parks & Recreation Manager George Tatge is setting up every resource he has -- a small army to pick up a massive amount of dead sea creatures.

By early morning they've already scouted the 30 plus miles of coastline in the county. "At Manasota Key it is handwork by county staff. At the north beaches it is mechanized work. Right here we have both county staff and the work offenders."

Now even considering hiring outside contracted help. So many, the fish are a nuisance to health, safety, and to the almighty dollar. Many typical tourism hot spots on a clear blue day as empty as could be. "It is certainly not something we want in our tourist locations. We do those first."

Some visitors like Joe Tryzna from Chicago say the shifting winds making breathing on the beach Friday bearable. "Yesterday was terrible. You could not breath on the beach. You coughed and sneezed and your eyes ran. Today is perfect that way anyway."

Nearly unnoticeable if not for the fish and their smell. "Gosh, you have to get rid of them."

From machine to hand a tedious process with no definite end in sight says Tatge. "Hopefully our beaches will be clean of fish by the end of the day. That is what we are shooting for. We will work through the weekend and rotate those crews depending on where they are best needed."

Wet sand is considered public access. County officials are now using low tide to get to some private beaches now inundated with dead fish.

Source

http://www.mysuncoast.com/news/south_newsroom/more-dead-fish-washin...

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on January 19, 2013 at 5:39pm

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/18/thousands-of-dead-fish-was...

Thousands Of Dead Fish Wash Ashore In South Carolina, Twice In One Week

The Huffington Post  |  By Cavan Sieczkowski Posted: 01/18/2013 10:55 am EST

WMBFNews.com, Myrtle Beach/Florence SC, Weather

Tens of thousands of dead fish washed ashore on a South Carolina beach on Tuesday, for at least the second time in a week.

Approximately 30,000 to 40,000 menhaden fish washed ashore along a mile-and-a-half-long stretch of beach from Georgetown County, S.C., to Pawleys Island, said Pawleys Island Police Chief Michael Fanning, according to NBC News. It seemed likely that thousands more of the 6- to 8-inch-long fish would wash ashore later.

This is the second time in one week such an incident has occurred in the area, notes NBC News. Late last week, hundreds of thousands of the small, oily fish washed up near Masonboro Island, N.C.

"One time I was here I saw a bunch of jellyfish," South Carolina resident Bill Vogel told NBC local affiliate WMBF News of the dead fish. "They were all on the shore but nothing like this, it's really weird."

The Department of Natural Resources (DNR) tried to explain the fish die... on Wednesday.

"It's an occurrence called hypoxia," Sergeant Steve Pop told WMBF. "That is dissolved oxygen levels in the water that drop to a level that is not sustainable for the fish... We've got some deep holes off of north inlet that holds these fish. This time of year the fish congregate in these holes which is depleting the oxygen source."

Mel Bell, Director of the Office of Fisheries Management for S.C. DNR, elaborated on the theory: “On Friday we had a new moon [which caused] real high high tides and real low low tides,” he told The Sun News. “Probably what happened was a school [of menhaden] got in an area of water on a high tide, in a hole or depression, and at low tide they were trapped and depleted the oxygen in the water. Then, all the fish would suffocate."

On Thursday, however, the DNR ruled out low dissolved oxygen, algal bloom or cold temperatures as the culprit for the fish death, according to The Sun.

Mass animal deaths made headlines back in 2011 when thousands of animals were found dead in countries around the world. The mass deaths continued into 2012. Hundreds of Humboldt squid beached themselves near Santa Cruz, Calif., in December. In September, dead seagulls and fish washed ashore on Lake Eerie.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on January 17, 2013 at 11:06pm

http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/PHOTO--Dead-fish_13415778

Purwakarta, Java — A fisherman looks at dead fish floating near the Jatiluhur dam at Purwakarta, West Java, yesterday. Thousands of tons of dead fish were found.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on January 16, 2013 at 2:05pm

http://www.wmbfnews.com/story/20595315/thousands-of-dead-fish-wash-...

Jan 15 2013

Thousands of dead fish wash ashore in Pawleys Island, SC

Courtesy viewer Lisa Mahan

PAWLEYS ISLAND, SC (WMBF) When you go to the beach you don't expect to find hundreds of dead fish covering the shore.
Pat Hawkins was heading out to the beach Tuesday morning to enjoy the weather, but when she saw the sea of dead Menhaden fish she was in shock.

Pawleys Island isn't the first place this week to see the dead Menhaden fish on their shores. DeBordieu Beach had the same issue the day before, according to Chief Michael Fanning of the Pawleys Island Police Department.

Events like this happen from time to time, last year an influx of Star Fish were found on the same beaches, Fanning said.

It may be confusing to the people who live nearby, but Fanning says the state is looking into what may have killed the fish.

Department of Health and Environmental Control (DHEC) and Department of Natural Resources (DNR) visited the area Tuesday and took water samples. No results were available at this time, but experts think a lack of oxygen caused the dead Menhaden to wash ashore.

The fish fell victim because they are more prone to feel the effects of the loss of oxygenated water, said Dr. Dan Hitchcock of Clemson University.

"When it's one species like that the species is menhaden all over the beach that's usually indicative of a low dissolve oxygen situation because they tend to be more fragile," Dr. Hitchcock said.

The dead fish are washing out to sea and with the help of the sea gulls the shore will soon be clear.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on January 16, 2013 at 6:50am

http://www.katc.com/news/dead-birds-in-duson-a-mystery/

Dead Birds in Duson A Mystery

Posted: Jan 15, 2013 10:18 PM by Steven Albritton
Updated: Jan 15, 2013 10:27 PM

 

An odd discovery was made Tuesday in Duson. More than 30 birds were found dead, and as of now no one knows why. The birds had no visible injuries and were just scattered in an area next to a sugar cane field.

"I came here this morning and saw birds all over the ground. One of them fell when I was walking around the property," James Wing said.

When Wing found the dead birds his first thought went to a deadly disease.

"I thought maybe it was West Nile. It was the first thing that popped in my head because they say, you see a dead bird you think it's West Nile," he said.

Wing called a state biologist to come in and investigate. The biologist collected around 30 of the dead birds for testing in Baton Rouge.

"We saw about a dozen of them that were ill. He said we'd probably see more until they could figure out what was the cause," Wing said.

Despite all the stormy and unusual weather, the biologist from the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries says it was likely not a factor in the deaths. Testing will give them a better idea of what happened by Thursday.

Comment by Howard on January 12, 2013 at 4:48am

A massive fish kill in North Carolina with an explanation that portrays the Cover-up's current level of desperation:  a mile of beach littered with hundreds of thousands of dead fish because they all crammed into a narrow creek and suffocated.  (Jan 11)

http://www.starnewsonline.com/article/20130111/ARTICLES/130119928/-...

Hundreds of thousands of dead fish washed ashore this week at Masonboro Island, according to the state Department of Environment and Natural Resources.

The dead fish, identified as Atlantic Menhaden, are strewn along the island's beaches and in the water, stretching over a one-mile area from the Mason Inlet jetty to Loosins Creek, officials reported.

The menhaden - a small, silvery filter-feeder - appear to have clustered by the thousands in a narrow area at Loosins Creek, causing dissolved oxygen levels in the water to plummet to nearly zero in less than one hour, killing the fish. According to reports, this can happen when menhaden tighten their school, swimming closer to together in what's thought to be an effort to avoid predators.

A monitoring station in the area, maintained by the state Division of Coastal Management, recorded a significant drop in dissolved oxygen levels in the early morning hours of Jan. 8.

State employees are still monitoring the area, but cautioned that dead fish will most likely continue to surface along the island throughout the weekend.

The dead fish pose no risk to humans.

Coastal Management, which manages Masonboro Island through its Coastal Reserve and National Estuarine Research Reserve Program, was first notified of the fish kill by a member of the public. The N.C. Marine Patrol also responded to a report from the public late Wednesday afternoon.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on January 5, 2013 at 4:13am

http://www.wcsh6.com/news/national/article/226823/44/Dead-and-dying...

Dead and dying arctic birds are showing up in Florida

1:44 PM, Jan 4, 2013

NAPLES, Florida (WBBH) -- Arctic birds that are supposed to be up north are ending up in Southwest Florida. They're about 1,000 miles from where they should be.

They're called razorbills and they look a little like penguins.

They're migrating to Southwest Florida and dying within hours. We found out how Hurricane Sandy might be responsible months after it made landfall.

Walking down the beach near Clam Pass, Ed Selby saw a bird he'd never seen before on the shores of Southwest Florida.

"They look a little bit like penguins. This is the first time I'd ever seen the birds here. In fact, I think it's the first time anyone's seen them here," said Selby, a volunteer with the Conservancy of Southwest Florida.

He found two dead razorbills - an arctic migratory seabird not native to Florida.

Over the past few weeks wildlife clinics have taken in dozens of the protected birds. Most were already dead; others were found exhausted and starving and died within hours.

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