Do you hear THE   HUM? https://t.me/ZetaTalk_Followers/80677

SOZT Missoula lies in a valley between mountain ranges that are riddled with rivers draining the steep mountain sides. If Kiev has multi-tonal trumpets because the reservoir is vibrating, and Belarus has horns because the river there is vibrating, then why should Missoula be exempt? The regions where the vibrating Earth plays music are where water is being vibrated. Elsewhere, it sounds like a roar, like Godzilla rising from the sea and roaming the land. Noise is sound where every frequency is heard. Music is controlled such that harmonics or coinciding or duplicating frequencies are heard.

That several distinct tones were heard in Missoula, each in turn, only means that the body of water producing them increased its frequency from tone to tone. In Kiev, chords were heard, as more than one arm of the reservoir was set to vibrating. The thrumming or fan beating sound that preceded the Missoula tones was the rock layers being pulled apart, as the N American continent is being pulled into a bow, as we have often explained. As the jerking apart and rebound of the underlying rock layers picked up the pace, the pitch of the music the nearby river produced climbed. Simple as that.

EOZT

ZetaTalk from the Jan, 21 2012 Q&A:

Strange sounds are heard all over the world! Can the Zetas comment? http://www.godlikeproductions.com/forum1/message1756314/pg1 [and from another] My question pertains to the noises, similar to the ones heard in Kiev, happening over the past week all over the world. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GZ2ZcmMxehk&feature=channel_video_title Here is a video compilation of some of the places experiencing these noises, some of the videos have been accused of being a hoax, and the essence of my question for the Zetas is; what is going on? I've managed to locate some videos from Australia, posted recently, that seem to verify what others have posted from other users located in different parts of Australia, one of the videos located here. It would appear we are seeing the "Kiev Effect" taking place worldwide now, and only recently on this scale; there is obviously more to this than meets the eye, would the Zetas care to comment?

SOZT

Where initially only a hum, and only in certain notorious parts of the world, rock under stress has become noisy. Known as the Taos hum, the sound of a diesel engine running somewhere underground was an early entry. Then the Seattle drums entered the arena, rhythmic booming which was ascribed to flapping manhole covers. Booms from snapping and heaving rock were reported in the New Madrid region and humming along the St. Lawrence Seaway increased.

But in 2011, it became clear that where we predicted that the Earth would moan during the 5.9 days of rotation stoppage, it was not going to be silent between then and now. The trumpets of Kiev and the horns of Belarus went viral on the Internet, followed quickly by a roar over Tampa Bay that sounded like Godzilla emerging from the sea. Now, in early 2012, this has spread to the drums of Costa Rica and the howl of Alberta and the Borneo snore.

Where is this leading? At least half the Earth, at any given point in time, will be having some sort of tension in its rock. Clapping and grinding fault lines, vibrating bodies of water, trembling rock strata resisting being pulled apart, and snapping rock under compression or being bent. All will be noisy, and the most likely reaction among those who hear it will be to conclude that the End Times have arrived. However known in various cultures around the world, allhave some reference to the coming times. The establishment will be unable to explain away these sounds, and once again the Internet will be sought and will lead inevitably to our explanations.

EOZT

Strange Sound Heard Throughout Costa Rica
January 11, 2012
http://www.costaricanewssite.com/strange-sound-heard-throughout-cos...
Is it the mysterious sound of the so-called coming Apocalypse? Some think that the mysterious sound heard in Costa Rica at around 12:30am this morning is exactly that. It is important to note that this is not the wind nor was it filmed anywhere near the ocean. The sound was heard throughout the entire country from Heredia to Perez Zeledon. The Costa Rica Volcanologist and Seismologist Organization is saying there is no Earth movements recorded at the time of the strange sound.

AUDIO: http://www.zetatalk5.com/ning/14ja001.mp3


ZetaTalk from the Jan, 14 2012 Q&A:

SOZT
There is a subset of the Caribbean Plate called the Panama Plate, though this subset moves as one with the Caribbean Plate. Nevertheless, there is a fault line running through Costa Rica, and during the incessant pressure of the slow-moving S American roll fault lines can pull apart and bang back together again, like clapping. As the recent cold spells in India reveal, the N Pole of Earth is pushed violently away when the Sun is over New Zealand and the magnetic N Pole of Earth (currently over Siberia) comes up over the horizon. This equates to midnight in Costa Rica, which is when the drums were heard. Residents there should get used to these midnight drums, which will be with them for some time.
EOZT

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Comment by Howard on January 17, 2015 at 10:06pm

Police Headquarters Evacuated After Mysterious Boom and Shaking (Jan 14)

The Downtown headquarters of the Columbus Ohio Police Division was evacuated for about 45 minutes yesterday while firefighters looked for the source of a loud noise that shook the building.

Nothing was found, said Sgt. David Pelphrey, a division spokesman. Early reports had said that an elevator dropped, but that wasn’t the case.

“It still remains a mystery,” Pelphrey said.

First-floor workers at 120 Marconi Blvd. heard the noise and felt shaking. Buildingwide alarms went off, prompting the evacuation at 12:15 p.m. Around 1 p.m., fire officials gave the all-clear to go back inside.

Source

http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2015/01/14/police-hea...

Comment by Howard on January 13, 2015 at 6:40am

Mystery Boom Felt Throughout Cedar Valley Iowa (Jan 12)

Around 7:30 a.m. Monday, many people said a large boom could be heard and felt throughout the Waterloo/Cedar Falls area.

More than 60 people commented on KWWL's Facebook page, asking what it could have been.

"There was a huge boom," said Todd Seelye of Cedar Falls. "It shook the house, shook the windows, shook the floors. I thought it was a tanker car exploding or something."

We contacted the Cedar Falls Police and Cedar Falls Fire Department. Neither had any information on what the loud noise was. They said they would have been on scene if something happened.

We also contacted Cedar Falls Utilities because some believe it could have been some type of transformer or telephone wire that had possibly gone out, but if that was the case crews would have also been out. An official said that they had no outages or explosions on their end that would have caused the noise and rumble Monday morning.

Another theory we heard was an issue at the metal scrapyard. So, we stopped by the metal yard in Waterloo, who said that they produce noises all the time because of their auto shredder, but they said that nothing out of the ordinary came from the yard today.

KWWL talked to dozens and dozens of people this morning, with the majority of them saying they heard a loud noise. Some even said their homes were physically shaken because of it.

All and all, if it was an explosion or an outage, crews would have heard about it and been able to offer some insight on the issue. So at this point, we are all just left  wondering what the boom could have been.

Source

http://www.kwwl.com/story/27830376/2015/01/12/did-you-hear-a-large-...

Comment by Howard on January 10, 2015 at 7:31pm

Authorities Baffled by Mysterious Boom in Lubbock Texas (Jan 6)

Hundreds of residents in Lubbock heard a loud boom around 6:05 p.m. Tuesday evening. Immediately, viewers took to Facebook to try to pinpoint the location and express their concern.

One viewer commented on Facebook saying it shook her house in Wolfforth, and many other viewers said it sounded like a car had ran into their garage.

Based on the viewers feedback, KAMC has gathered that the boom stretched from 19th and Milwaukee to as far as 110th and Indiana.

The Lubbock County Sheriff's Deputies went to investigate the area around 1585 and Brownfield Highway after receiving reports of the sound of an explosion. But after scoping the area for 30 minutes, they left empty handed.

So, what was the source of the loud boom that almost everyone heard but no one saw? The answer seems to be unknown.

Lynn County Architectural Testing, Inc., a company that conducts blast tests for commercial companies, said it had not conducted a test during the time the boom was reported.

There have been several accounts of what people thought they saw, like a large cloud of black smoke in the sky, however nothing has been confirmed. So for now, everyone is left speculating.

Source

http://www.everythinglubbock.com/story/d/story/residents-react-to-m...

Comment by Howard on January 9, 2015 at 9:00pm

Mysterious Booms Continue in Central Oklahoma, Rattle Homes, Scare Livestock (Jan 9)

video

Experts are baffled by the mysterious booms shaking a city in central Oklahoma.

Oklahoma Geological Survey research seismologist Austin Holland says a series of thunderous booms rattled the Norman area at 11:19 a.m. Friday and that numerous more were reported in the same place around the same time Thursday.

Both Holland and National Weather Service meteorologist Matthew Day say they have no explanation for the booms that have been rattling houses and frightening livestock in the city on the southern edge of Oklahoma City.

Holland says there have been no earthquakes close enough to the area to be the cause of the booms. Day says a phenomenon known as cryoseisms (kry-oh-SY'-iz-uhmz) — which occurs when water freezes quickly in soil or rock, then expands and cracks — is also not to blame.

Source

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2015/01/09/us/ap-us-mystery-booms.h...

http://www.koco.com/news/experts-baffled-by-boom-in-central-oklahom...

Comment by Howard on January 9, 2015 at 5:23am

Mystery Booms in SE Iowa (Jan 7)

Ottumwa residents have been posting their concerns on Facebook trying to figure out what could be causing the loud booms over the last 2 weeks.

KTVO decided to see what people had to say, and here are some of the comments we got.

Jean said, "I live 30 miles away from Ottumwa and it happened at my mom's house two weeks ago around 9 pm. It sounded like a bomb went off, it shook my house, nick knacks moved. I have lived in this area 54 years. It has never happened before. Someone needs to find out what it is."

And one Ottumwa resident told us the noises are indescribable.

"It's just so unexplainable because everybody throughout town has been hearing it, but yet there's some people that live two or three blocks away that don't hear a thing," said Ottumwa resident, Dana Jones.

For now, it's a mystery yet to be solved.

Source

http://www.heartlandconnection.com/news/story.aspx?id=1146705#.VK9V...

Comment by Howard on January 9, 2015 at 5:07am

Mystery Booms Across Central Oklahoma (Jan 8)

Norman Police Department was flooded with calls around 11:30 Thursday morning from people all over the area who reported hearing loud booms and feeling vibrations.

Calls came in from all over central Oklahoma, including Newalla, Norman, Meeker, Lake Draper, Shawnee, Wellston, Agra and Parkland.

Anthony Young was just one of many who called 911. The mysterious booms rattled his home Thursday morning.

“We thought some nut was out here with explosives,” Young said.

Calls flooded in from Norman, Meeker and Shawnee.

Young said the booms shook his house so hard his windows rattled.

“It sounded like thunder but you could feel the ground shake and it was nothing like an earthquake. You know, we've felt earthquakes before, and it’s nothing like that,” he said.

Several law enforcement agencies are trying to find the source. The USGS said it didn’t get any reports of unusual sounds, and there were no earthquakes at the time.

Sources

http://www.koco.com/news/what-is-the-source-of-the-loud-booms-in-ce...

http://kfor.com/2015/01/08/strange-booms-heard-in-oklahoma/

http://www.normantranscript.com/news/experts-say-mystery-boom-not-a...

Comment by Howard on January 7, 2015 at 3:18am

Poleshift.ning gets two links in a mainstream news media article on mystery booms in Indiana.

Mysterious Booms Shake up Elkhart County Residents (Jan 3)

Weather was ruled out as a cause of the booms, whose source remains a mystery.

Some things may go bump in the night, but the things that went “boom” over the weekend remain a mystery.

In a region full of trains and areas that draw hunters, loud noises aren’t unusual, except when they jolt residents out of bed or rattle windows and walls.

That’s what happened when people across northern Indiana said they heard mysterious sounds Saturday, Jan. 3.

Mike Ropp, who lives on the north side of Elkhart, said he heard two loud booms Saturday — one around 3:30 p.m. and another about 10 minutes later.

“I went out and walked around, looking on all sides for any sign of smoke or anything else that might indicate a cause,” Ropp said in an email Monday, Jan. 5. “I went outside again, as did three more neighbors. One of them had driven around the area to our east (and) saw nothing.”

Ropp said he lives close to a fire station south of the Simonton Lake area, which draws some hunters and fireworks. But Saturday’s sound was unfamiliar.

“It sounded more powerful than an M-80 (firework),” he said. “It was more of a percussion sound. It didn’t have the sonic boom sound — that’s different.”

Kevin Reed, who also lives in the area, said he woke up to the sound at 5:30 a.m. that day.

“I thought maybe someone had broke into my house or that it was a gas explosion,” he said.

About 10 minutes after that, he said he heard emergency cars rushing down the street to a fire at Dunlap Plaza.

Elkhart city and county emergency dispatchers said Monday morning, Jan. 5, there were no other reports of fires, explosions or shots in the area during the times residents reported hearing the blasts.

Other areas, including a township in northeast Pennsylvania, reported hearing the boom. WNEP, an ABC affiliate there, reported residents heard the loud boom Jan. 1, called emergency units but found no trace of the sound’s source.

IS THIS THE FIRST TIME THIS HAS HAPPENED?

Yes and no.

During last winter’s extreme temperatures, parts of the country experienced “frost quakes” or cryoseism, according to Farmers’ Almanac. These reports of loud booms are caused by extreme low temperatures.

Cryoseism can happen when soil saturated by rain or melted snow drops from freezing to subzero temperatures in a small period of time, according to the almanac. As the moisture that seeps into the soil freezes, it expands and creates pressure on the bedrock, which can crack under the pressure, resulting in a loud popping noise. 

Reports of booms and shakes from last year in Minnesota, Illinois, Missouri, Indiana and even Canada were attributed to the extreme cold and frost, according to the L.A. Times.

However, the National Weather Service in Northern Indiana said that wasn’t the case this time.

“There was a lot of rain in the area and initially, we thought it might have been a rumble of thunder,” said Sam Lashley, senior meteorologist at the center. “But we’ve determined it was nothing weather-related.”

Even with Monday’s snow and extreme cold, Lashley said weekend temperatures “weren’t even close” to where a frost quake would happen.

SO WHAT WAS IT?

After hearing the booms, people posted their questions and working theories on social media.

1) Pole shift theory Enthusiasts at a blog that tracks natural disasters and space activity showed similar reports from December 2012 in Arizona, Texas, Alabama, Georgia and Rhode Island, which the blog attributed to seismic activity and tectonic plate shifts throughout North America.
However, the U.S. Geological Survey reported no unusual activity.

2) Meteor shower connection
There were also questions about the Quadrantid meteor shower Saturday, Jan. 3. Ongoing meteor showers can cause loud booms when they break up above Earth, L.A. Times reports. The meteor shower didn’t reach its peak until Saturday evening, long after the loud noises were reported in Elkhart County. Calls to NASA’s public communication office were not returned.  

3) Large jet
Some on social media speculated the sound was from a large jet, though Kevin Rector, manager at the office of aviation at the Indiana Department of Transportation’s aviation team, confirmed in an email Tuesday, Jan. 6, that he had no reports of aircraft traveling in the area at supersonic speeds, though he said he heard of several towns putting on fireworks displays for the New Year.


Source

http://www.elkharttruth.com/living/2015/01/06/Elkhart-County-reside...

Comment by Howard on January 6, 2015 at 10:29pm

Emergency Management Agency in Tennessee Investigating Ongoing Mystery Booms (Jan 6)

The “booms” have been occurring “for quite some time,” and the Morristown-Hamblen Emergency Management Agency is working to find the source of the noise.

Chris Bell, director of the Morristown-Hamblen Emergency Management Agency in Morristown, said they have had widespread reports from people in the community about mysterious vibrations and unexplained loud noises.

“People report windows shaking or a boom that sounds like a transformer booming, or something running into their house,” Bell said.

According to Bell, EMA is working with the Center for Earthquake Research and Information and the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency to determine the cause of the disruption. CERI has deployed an instrument that detects seismic activity to help determine the source of the sounds.

“We had an instrument deployed here in town to figure out what those booms originate from,” he said. “The instrument is a seismic instrument that reads when there is ground shaking. We are still investigating.”

“There is speculation,” he said. “We are trying to rule out man-made (causes), and we believe that it could be something that is natural, but we cannot determine that until we have reviewed the data.

As of 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, more than two dozen people posted to the Morristown-Hamblen Emergency Management Agency Facebook page claiming they had experienced the disturbance.

The agency is asking the public to call 423-581-6225 and ask for Director Chris Bell or Teresa Ewing if they have heard the mysterious “booms.”​

Source

http://www.knoxnews.com/news/local-news/agencies-investigating-myst...

Comment by Howard on January 6, 2015 at 6:11am

Unexplained Booms in Western Pennsylvania (Jan 4)

When the boom went off, about 8 p.m. Sunday, Diane Mangino was relaxing in her kitchen with her husband and her dogs.
 
"It's like a huge blast," she said. "You feel the house move and hear it at the same time."

Mangino said it was the third occurrence in about a week near her house. And she's not the only one to have heard and felt the phenomenon.

Residents in Lawrence County -- Ellport, Ellwood City, Wayne Township, Shenango Township -- have been burning up their Facebook feeds for at least a month with reports of the loud booms and accompanying ground tremors. And nobody can say conclusively what's causing them.

Brian Melcer, director of Lawrence County's Public Safety Department, said the county 911 dispatch center has been receiving calls about the booms and tremors, and police officers have been dispatched to investigate, to no avail.

Ray Beiersdorfer, a geology professor at Youngstown State University who has provided legislative testimony on seismic effects of the underground injection wells, said the earth's behavior in low-level earthquakes is consistent with the reports coming out of Lawrence County.

Sometimes low-intensity earthquakes can be accompanied with seismic activity, Beiersdorfer said, which results in a loud boom heard at the precise moment the earth begins to shake. But he said it's unlikely that the local booms -- at least the one at about 8 p.m. Sunday --  are being caused by an earthquake.

Beiersdorfer said neither the U.S. Geological Survey, an agency that monitors seismic activity throughout the nation, nor Columbia University, which also maintains seismic monitoring stations in the region, reported any earthquakes Sunday night of sufficient intensity to produce the phenomena described by Mangino and other county residents.

While no one can say conclusively what the booms are, plenty of people can say what probably isn't causing them. Amanda Witman, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Environmental Protection, said the department is unaware of any permits issued for blasting in the county.

The DEP's Northwestern Pennsylvania office in Meadville has not received any reports of any phenomena in the region, which includes Lawrence County, Witman said. She urged residents to contact the region's emergency response unit at 814-332-6945, or 800-373-3398 after hours, the next time they hear the boom.

There were no thunderstorms in the region Sunday night, according to the National Weather Service, and meteorologist Brad Rehak said he is unaware of any other meteorological phenomenon that might create a similar effect.

Source

http://www.ellwoodcityledger.com/news/local_news/cause-of-county-s-...

Comment by Howard on January 3, 2015 at 8:38pm

Mystery Booms NE of Los Angeles (Jan 2)

Several Victorville residents said they were awakened early Friday morning by at least three loud “booms” that were strong enough to shake the windows of their homes, but the source of the sounds remains a mystery.

The booms were heard at about 3:30 a.m. Reports came from neighborhoods near El Evado and Luna roads in Victorville and as far as Balsam Avenue on the other side of Interstate 15.

Local authorities said they could not identify the cause of the explosions.

Victor Valley Sheriff’s Station spokeswoman Pamela Hoffman said the station received reports of “loud booms” and officials checked the area and did not find anything. She said the cause of the noise was unknown.

If 911 dispatchers believed the noise was caused by fireworks then calls would have been transferred to local fire officials.

San Bernardino County Fire Capt. Jay Hausman and Engineer Jeff Allen both said they did not have any information about what could have caused the noises.

One resident said the explosion caused car alarms to sound in their neighborhood. Other residents posted on social media asking if an earthquake had occurred.

No significant earthquakes had been reported in the area in the last 24 hours, according to the U.S. Geological Society.

Source

http://www.vvdailypress.com/article/20150102/News/150109979

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